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Livy (Titus Livius), the great Roman historian, was born at or near Patavium (Padua) in 64 or 59 BCE; he may have lived

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LIVY (Titus Livius) the great Roman historian was born at or near Patavium (Padua) in 59 B.C. and from early

manhood

mostly at Rome until shortly before his death in A.D. 17, and although never in sympathy with the

onwards

lived

establishment

of

Augustus became His

of

only extant

Rome

the

work

is

age by emperor.

imperial

a friend of that

part of his history

(which he called Annales) from

the foundation of the to 9 B.C. in city 142 books. Of them we have in number 35 only, and short summaries of all the

except two. The whole work was, long after his death, divided into Decades or series of 10. Books i-io we have rest

entire

;

books 11-20 are

lost

;

books

2

i

-45

are entire, except parts of 41 and 43. Of the rest only fragments and the summaries

remain. In splendid style Livy, a man of wide sympathies and proud of Rome's past, presented an uncritical but clear

and living narrative of the greatness.

rise

of Rome to

I

r

J6G 367 11 i

L_ NY PUBLIC

3333

f

THE BRANCH

08&8

UBR.RK

7288

'

THE LOEB CLASSICAL LIBRARY FOUNDED BY JAMES LOEB,

LL.D.

EDITED BY E. H.

WARMINGTON,

M.A., F.E.HIST.SOC.

FORMER EDITORS fT. E.

fW. H.

PAGE, D.

C.H., LITT.D.

ROUSE,

fE. CAPPS, L. A.

LITT.D.

LIVY I

BOOKS

I

114

AND

II

PH.D., LL.D.

POST,

L.H.D.

,LIVY IN

FOURTEEN VOLUMES

BOOKS

I

AND

II

WITH AN ENGLISH TRANSLATION BY

B. O.

FOSTER, PH.D.

OF STANFORD UNIVERSITY

CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS

HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS LONDON

WILLIAM HEINEMANN LTD MOMLXVII

First printed 1919 Reprinted 1925, 1939, 1952, 1957, 1961, 1967

TO A. L. F.

Printed in Great Britain

CONTENTS PAGE

TRANSLATOR'S PREFACE

vii

INTRODUCTION

BOOK

I

1

SUMMARY OF BOOK BOOK

ix

I

211

217

II

SUMMARY OF BOOK

II

INDEX

435 441

MAPS

ROME

IN

THE REGAL PERIOD

WESTERN CENTRAL ITALY

At end ,,

TRANSLATOR'S PREFACE THE Latin

text of this volume has been set

up

from that of the ninth edition (1908) of Book I., and the eighth edition (1894) of Book II., by Weisseiiborn

and

M tiller,

except that the Periockae have

been reprinted from the text of Rossbach (1910). But the spelling is that adopted by Professors Conway and Walters in their critical edition of Books I.-V. (Oxford, 1914), which is the source also of a

number of readings which

differ

from those given

and has furnished, besides, the materials from which the textual notes I have aimed to indicate have been drawn up.

in the Wcissenborn-Mtiller text,

every instance where the reading printed does not on the authority of one or more of the good

rest

MSS., and to give the author of the emendation. are often cited by the symbols given in the Oxford edition, but for brevity's sake I have usually employed two of my own, viz. fi and r. The former means " such of the good MSS. as are

The MSS.

the latter "one or MSS. and early printed ediAnyone who wishes more specific informa-

not cited for other readings,"

more of the tions."

inferior

tion regarding the source of a variant will consult vii

PREFACE the elaborate apparatus of the Oxford text, whose editors have placed all students of the first decade under lasting obligations by their thorough and

minute report of the MSS. With the publication of their second volume there will be available for the

first

time an adequate diplomatic basis for the

criticism of

Books I.-X.

have utilized throughout the translations by Philemon Holland, George Baker, and Canon Roberts, and have occasionally borrowed a happy I

expression

from

Conway, and

commentaries of Edwards, mentioned in the introduction.

the

others,

The unpretentious notes

in the college edition of

former teacher, the late Professor Greenough, have been particularly useful in pointing out the

my

significance of the word-order. Acknowledgments are also due to

my colleagues, Professors Fairclough, Hempl, Cooper, and Briggs, and to Professor Noyes of the University of California,

each of

whom

has given

me some

good

suggestions. B. O. F.

STANFORD UNIVERSITY, CALIFORNIA. 1919.

vm

INTRODUCTION

FROM

entries

in

Chronicle of Eusebius

Jerome's

we

Patavian was born in 59

re-working

of

the

learn that Titus Livius the B.C.,

the year of Caesar's

consulship, and cjied in his native town (the modern Padua) in 17 A.D. Of his parents nothing is known. They were presumably well-to-do, for their first

in Greek and Latin which constituted the standard curriculum of that time, and was afterwards able to devote along life to the unremunerative work of writing. That he was by birth an aristocrat is no more than an inference from his outstanding sym-

son

received

literature

and

the in

training rhetoric

pathy with the senatorial party. Livy's childhood witnessed the conquest of Gaul and Caesar's rapid rise to lordship over the Roman world. These early years he doubtless passed in his northern home. Patavium laid claim to great antiquity. Livy tells us himself in his opening chapter the legend of

its

founding by the Trojan Antenor, and elsewhere describes with unmistakable satisfaction the vain

attempt of the Spartan Cleonymus

(in

302

B.C.)

to ix

INTRODUCTION subdue the Patavians. 1 They defended themselves with equal vigour and success against the aggressions of the Etruscans and the inroads of the Gauls, and in the war with Hannibal cast in their lot with Rome. In 49 B.C., when Livy was ten years old, the town became a Roman municipality and its citizens were enrolled in the Fabian tribe. The place was a 2 great centre of trade, especially in wool, and under Augustus was perhaps the wealthiest city in Italy, next to Rome, 3 to which in some respects it presented a striking contrast, since the Patavians maintained the simple manners and strict morality

which had long gone out of fashion in the cosmo4 We cannot say how old Livy was when he left Patavium, but it is probable that his tastes and character had been permanently influenced by the old-world traditions of his native town. Did he politan capital.

Rome

go to

with the intention of pursuing there the

career of a rhetorician

and subsequently become ? It may have been

interested in historical studies 1

Liv. x.

says,

ii.

who had

There were many living in his own day, Livy seen the beaks of the ships captured from in the temple

Clcoriymus, which were preserved as trophies of Juno. 2

Martial, xiv.

cxliii.,

speaks of the thickness of Patavian

tunics. 8

Strabo,

in.

Landeskunde, 4

clxix.

and

v.

ccxiii.;

cf.

Nissen, Italische

2, p. 220.

Plin. Epist. I. xiv. 6, says of a young protege: "His maternal grandmother is Sarrana Procula, from the muniYou know the manners of the cipality of Patavium. place yet Serrana is a pattern of strictness even to the Patavians." ;

INTRODUCTION Perhaps he had already resolved to write history and wished to make use of the libraries and other sources of information which were lacking in a Certain passages in his earlier provincial town. books l indicate that he was already familiar with the City when he began his great work, about 27 B.c., 2 and a reference to a .conversation with Augustus in Book IV. seems to arg.u'e that it was not long till he was on a friendly footing with the Emperor. 3 He doubtless continued to reside in Rome, with occasional visits to Pat'aVium and other places in Italy, till near the end of his long life. Livy seems never. .to have held any public office, but to have given himself up entirely to literature. Seneca says that he wrote dialogues which one might classify under history as well as under philosophy, besides books which were professedly philoso.

4

And

Quintilian quotes a letter from Livy which was very likely an essay on the training of the orator, for in the passage cited he advises the young man to read Demosthenes and Cicero, and then such as most nearly resembled sophical. to his son

1

e.g. I. iv.

5

;

I.

viii.

2

It could not well

3

Liv. iv. xx.

5

;

I.

xxvi. 13.

have been earlier than 27, for in i. xix. 3 and iv. xx. 7 Octavian is mentioned with the title of Augustus, which the senate only conferred on him in January of that year. Nor may we put the date much later, for in mentioning the occasions on which the temple of Janus had been closed (l. xix. 3) Livy has nothing to say of the second of the two closings which took place in his own life-time, namely that of 25 B.C. 7.

4

Sen. Epiat. 100.

9.

ad

INTRODUCTION them. 1 So, in another place, Quintilian tells us that he finds in Livy that there was a certain teacher who bade his pupils obscure what they said. 2 It may have been in this same essay that he made the criticism on Sallust which seemed to the elder Seneca to be unjust, that he had not only appropriated a sentence from Thucydides but had spoilt 3 And there is another passage in it in the process.

Seneca where Livy is credited witli having quoted approvingly a mot of the rhetorician Miltiades against orators who affected archaic and sordid words, which 4 If Livy was may also be an echo of the letter. about thirty-two years old when he began to write history it is probable that this essay was composed some years later, for it is unlikely to have been written before the son was about sixteen. 5 We may therefore think of the historian as putting aside his magnum opus for a season, to be of use in the education of the boy, who, whether or no he profited

by

his father's instructions in rhetoric, at all

events became a writer, and

is

twice

named by the

elder Pliny as one of his authorities, in Books V. and VI. of the Natural History, which deal with geography.

In a sepulchral inscription found in Padua, which that of our Livy, two sons are named Titus

may be

and their

Livius Priscus and Titus Livius Longus, 1

2 4 6

xu

Quint, x. i. 39 (cf. n. Quint, vin. ii. 18.

v. 20). 3

Sen. Controv. ix.

26. Schunz, Geschichtc der romischen Litteratur,

Ibid. ix.

14.

i.

ii.

ii

3 .

1,

p. 419.

INTRODUCTION mother's name is given as Cassia. 1 The only other item of information we possess about the family is supplied by the elder Seneca,

named Lucius Magi us,

law,

who mentions

a son-in-

who had though men rather

as a declaimer

some following for a time, endured him for the sake of 2 praised him for his own.

his father-in-law

than

Of Livy's social life in Rome we know nothing more than that he enjoyed the friendship of Augustus, and probably, as we have seen, from an early date in his 3 The intimacy was apparently mainstay in Rome. tained till the end of the Emperor's life, for it cannot have been

much 4

before A.D. 14 that Livy, as related

advised

his patron's grand-nephew to take B.C.) up the writing of history. relations subsisting between the Emperor

by Suetonius,

Claudius (born 9

The good and the historian do honour to the sense and candour of Livy gloried in the history of the republic, yet he could but acquiesce in the new order of things. And the moral and religious reforms of Augustus, both.

his

wish to revive the traditions of an elder day, his forms inherited from a time when

respect for the

Rome was really governed by a senate, must have commanded Livy's hearty approval. On the other C.I.L. v. 2975 = Dessau, Inscriptiones Latinae Sdtctae, 1

(

T Livius C. f. sibi et /suis/T. Livio T. 2919) T. Livio T. f. Longo f. ,/Cassiae Sex. f. Primae 2 Sen. Controv. x. praef. 2. :

f. /

Frisco

f., /

uxori.

3

It is just possible that the conversation with Augustus in iv. xx. 7 took place at some time after the original publication of that book, and that the reference was

mentioned

inserted later.

4

Suet. Claud,

xli.

xiii

INTRODUCTION when Livy's great history was appealing to men's patriotism and displaying the ideal Rome as no other of the literary work (with the possible exception side,

contemporaneous Aeneid) had ever done, it was easy for the Emperor to smile at the scholar's exaggerated admiration of Pompey, 1 and even to overlook the frankness of his query whether more of good or of harm had come to the state from the birth of Julius Livy died three years after Augustus, in

Caesar. 2

If he continued workA.D., at the ripe age of 76. ing at his history up to the last he had devoted more

17

than 40 years to the gigantic enterprise. Jerome says We can only conjecture that he died in Patavium. whether he was overtaken by death while making a visit to his old home, or had retired thither, with the

new regime, to spend his declining The latter is perhaps the more likely assumpThe character of Tiberius can have possessed

coming years. tion. little

may

in of the

claim to the sympathy of Livy, and life in Rome its charm for him, now that his

well have lost

old patron was no more.

Ann. iv. xxxiv., describing the trial of CremuCordus for lese-majeste on the ground that he had in which he praised Brutus and styled published annals " last of the Cassius the Romans," makes Cremutius say in " Titus Livius, pre-eminent for eloquence and his defence candour, so lauded Pompey that Augustus called him a Pompeian yet it made no difference in their friendship." 1

Tacitus,

tius

:

;

*

xiv

Sen. Nat. Quaest. v. xviii. 4.

INTRODUCTION II

Livy seems to have called his history simply Ah Urbe Condita, " From the Founding of the City/' l just as Tacitus was later to call his Annals Ah "From the death of the Divine Excessu Divi Augusti, o Augustus." He began with the legend of Aeneas, and brought his narrative down to the death of Drusus 2 (and the defeat of Quintilius Varus ? ) in 9 B.C. There is no reason to think that Livy intended, as some have supposed, to go on to the death of In the preface to one of the lost books Augustus. he remarked that he had already earned enough of reputation and might have ceased to write, \vere *

not that his restless

it

work. 3

w as r

spirit

sustained

by

He

probably toiled on till his strength failed him, with no fixed goal in view, giving his history to the public in parts, as these were severally 4 completed. The following table, taken from Schanz, an attempt to reconstruct these instalments

is

:

Books I.-V. From the founding of the City to its conquest by the Gauls (387-386 B.C.). 1 Livy once refers to his work as "my annals" (in meos annales, XLIII. xiii. 2), and Pliny, N.H praef. 16, speaks of a certain volume of Livy's "histories," but these are merely generic names. 2 The Periocha of Book CXLII. ends with these events, but the mention of Varus, which is found in only one MS., is generally regarded as a late addition. Its genuineness is, however, upheld by Rossbach, in his edition, ad loc. 3 4

Plin. i.e. Gf.schichte der romischcn Littcratur,

ii

3 .

1,

p. 421.

xv

INTRODUCTION VI.-XV.

XVI.-XX.

To the subjugation of Italy (265 B.C.). The Punic wars to the beginning of

the war with Hannibal (219 B.C.). XXI.-XXX. The war with Hannibal (to 201 B.C.). XXXI.-XL. To the death of King Philip of

Macedon (179 XLI.-LXX. (91

B.C.).

To the outbreak

of the Social

War

B.C.).

The

LXXI.-LXXX. Marius (86

LXXXI.-XC. XCI.-CVIII. Gallic

War

Social

War

to the death of

B.C.).

(58

To the death of Sulla (78 B.C.). From the war with Sertorius to the B.C.).

CIX.-CXVI. From the beginning of the Civil Wars to the death of Caesar (44 B.C.). CXVII.-CXXXIII. To the death of Antony and Cleopatra (30

B.C.).

CXXXIV-CXLII. to the

The

death of Drusus (9

principate of Augustus

B.C.).

be noticed that certain portions fall naturdecades (notably XXI.-XXX.), or pentads Elsewhere, and particularly in that part (e.g. I.-V.). of the work which deals with the writer's own times, no such symmetry is discernible. Later however it became the uniform practice of the copyists to It will

ally into

divide the history into decades.

This

is

clearly seen

the wholly distinct and independent MS. tradition of the several surviving sections. Only about a quarter of the whole work has been in

xvi

INTRODUCTION

We have the Preface and Books I. X., preserved. covering the period from Aeneas to the year 293 D.C.; Books XXI. -XXX. describing the Second Punic War; and Books XXXI. -XLV., which continue the Rome's conquests down to the year 167 B.C.

story of

and the victories of Lucius Aemilius Paulus. 1 For the loss of the other books the existence from first century of our era of a handy abridgment no doubt largely responsible. It is to this Martial

the is

alludes in the following distich (xiv. cxc.): Pellibus exiguis artatur Livius ingens, Quern mea non totum bibliotheca capit. 2 If we had this Epitome 3 it would be some slight compensation for the disappearance of the original books, but we have only a compend of it, the

so-called Periochae, and certain excerpts thought to have been made from another summary of it, no longer extant, which scholars refer to as the Chronicon, to wit, the fragments of the Oxyrhynchus Papyrus, the Prodigiorum Liber of Obsequens, and

the consular

The (only 1

lists

of Cassiodorius.

Periochae, or

summaries of the several Books

CXXXVI. and CXXXVII.

are wanting), are the

Books XLI.-XLV. contain many lacunae. Thus translated by Professor Duff:

In vellum small huge Livy now is dressed ; bookshelves could not hold him uncompressed. See Schanz, op. cit. ii 3 1, pp. 425-428. H. A. Sanders, "The Lost Epitome of Livy" (in Roman Historical Sources and Institutions, p. 257), makes the interesting suggestion that it may have been written by Livy's son.

My

3

.

xvii

INTRODUCTION most valuable of these sources

for supplying the gaps our text of Livy. Their author narrates briefly what seem to him the leading events in each book, adding a reference to other matters treated in the in

1

original.

The

Periochae are thus a kind of com-

promise between a book of excerpts for the use of readers who for any reason could not or would not go to the unabridged Livy, and a table of contents for the

convenience of those who did. 2

usually

printed

with

included in this one.

editions It

may

of

Livy,

They

are

and

are

*/

be noted here that

double recension, of which B appears from its style to be of a piece with those of all the other books, while A is thought to have Per.

I.

exists in a

come from the

Chronicon.

In 1903 a papyrus was discovered at Oxyrhynchus which contained fragments of a compend of Roman history which was based on Livy, though it seems not to have been taken from Livy directly but from

the Chronicon, which was also, as we have said, the source of Obsequens and Cassiodorius. The MS. is assigned to the third century, and the book must therefore have been composed in that or a still It contains eight columns of uncial 1-3 preserve a selection of the these writing. events recorded in Livy, Books XXXVII.-XL., with the subject(which we have), while 4-8 deal

earlier period.

Of

1

2

xviii

See e.g. the last sentence of Per. II., Sehanz, p. 425.

p. 438.

INTRODUCTION matter of Books XLVIII.-LV. But there is a column gone between column 6 and column 7, which treated of the years 143 and 142 B.C.

Magnus Aurelius Cassiodorius Senator lived about 480 to 575, and was Consul in 514, under Theocloric. Among his writings was a chronicle, from Adam to A.D. 519. For the earlier periods he used Eusebius and Jerome, but from the expulsion of Tarquinius to A.D. 31 he names as his authorities Titus Livius and Aufidius Bassus. His list of consuls for this period shows kinship with the Oxyrhynchus Papyrus and Obsequens. In

his

Prodigiorum

Liber

Julius

Obsequens

enumerates in chronological order the portents which occurred from the year 190 to the year 12 B.C. In its original form the catalogue probably 1 began, as the title in the MS. indicates, with the

The year 249. Schariz thinks it of our era,

book is of unknown date a product of the fourth century

little is

when paganism made

:

its

last

struggle

2

Rossbach inclines to a somewhat earlier date. 3 In any case Rossbach has shown that the author was a believer in prodigies, and against Christianity.

therefore a pagan. lulii Obsequentis Ab Anno Urbis Conditae digiorum Liber. 3 2 Schanz, Rom. Lit. is- 1, p. 85. 8 See his edition, p. xxxiii. 1

DV

Pro-

.

XIX

INTRODUCTION

III

In his preface to the whole work Livy gives a satisfactory account of his conception of history and the ends he himself had in view. He begins with an

apology for adding to the already large number of

Roman

histories.

Those who attempt

this

theme

hope, he says, to surpass their predecessors either in

accuracy or style, and it is doing Livy no injustice to infer that in his own case it was the belief that he could make the story of Rome more vivid and readable than anyone had yet done which gave him the courage to undertake the task. But whether he succeeds or not, he will be glad, he tells us, to have done what he could for the memory of the foremost people

of the world.

He

recognizes the immense labour

which confronts him, in consequence of the more than seven hundred years which he must deal with, and admits that it will be labour thrown away on most of his readers, who will have little patience with the earlier history in their eagerness to be reading of the civil wars and the events of their own generation. " I and the myself, on the contrary," he continues sentiment reveals at once the man's romantic spirit

" shall seek

an additional reward for my toil, my back upon the evils which our may age has witnessed for so many years, so long at least as I am absorbed in the recollection of the brave days that

xx

I

in this

turn

INTRODUCTION 1 He refers to the marvellous tales which were associated with the founding of the City as to He declines to matters of no great consequence. vouch for their authenticity, though he means to set them down as he finds them and lie apparently re-

of old."

;

gards them as possessing a certain symbolic truth, at But the really important thing in Rome's least. history is the way her power was founded on morality

waxed mighty with the maintenance of and was now fallen upon evil days through For the use of historical study lies in their decay. and

discipline,

these,

The story of a great people application to life. fraught with examples and warnings, both for the individual and for the state. And no nation is better its is

worth studying than Rome, for in none did righteousness and primitive simplicity so long resist the encroachments of wealth and luxury. It was the ethical aspect of history then that chiefly appealed to Livy, and he chose Rome for his subject because the rise of the Roman empire seemed to him the best example of the fruition of those qualities which he wished to inculcate. To do this he must first

of

all

morality

win the interest of

is

his goal style

which he hopes to lead

is

men

his

readers, and if

certainly the road

towards

it.

We

by must

fix our attention on these two things if we would approach Livy's work in the spirit of his

therefore

1

he

In another passage (XLIII. xiii. 2) Livy tells us that when writing of old-world things his spirit somehow becomes

is

old-fashioned.

xxi

INTRODUCTION ancient readers, and understand their almost unqualified approval of it.

For Livy's success was both immediate and lasting. have already referred to the frank way in which he himself recognized his fame, in the preface to one of I

the books of his History, and the younger Pliny tells a delightful story of an enthusiastic Spanish admirer

who

travelled from Cadiz to

Rome

solely to

behold

the great writer, and having gratified his curiosity returned forthwith to his home. 1 Livy's magnanimity

was warmly praised by the elder Seneca, who said that he was by nature a most candid judge of all 2 great talents, and it is a striking testimony to the justice of this observation that the modern reader's admiration for Hannibal is largely a reflection of Livy's,

which

formidable

all

his prejudice against

Rome's most

altogether stifle. Tacitus he considered the most elo-

enemy could not

too admired Livy, whom quent of the older historians, as Fabius Rusticus was

recent. 3 Quintilian compared him with and Herodotus, spoke of the wonderful fascination of his narrative, his great fairness, and the inexpressible eloquence of the speeches, in which everything was suited not only to the circumstances but to

of the

more

the speaker. 4 1

3

Quintilian also praised his represent-

2 Sen. Suas. vi. 22. Plin. Ep. n. iii. 8. Agric. x. and the passage already quoted

Annals

from the

(iv. xxxiv.).

There are some 400 of these Quint. Inst. Or, x. i. 101. inserted speeches in the extant text, some consisting of only 4

xxii

INTRODUCTION ation of the emotions, particularly the gentler ones, in which field he said he had no superior. Livy

shared with Virgil the honour of being the most widely read of Latin writers, and in consequence incurred the resentment of the mad Caligula, who lacked but little of casting out their works and their

from all the libraries, alleging of Livy that he was verbose and careless. 1 Even Quintilian could tax him with prolixity, 2 though he seems to have owned that it was but the defect of a quality, for he portraits

elsewhere speaks of his "milky richness." 3 The only other jarring note in the general chorus of admiration is

sounded by the

critic

Asinius Pollio,

who reproached

"

Pataviriity," by which he perhaps Livy's style with meant that it was tainted with an occasional word or

idiom peculiar to the historian's native dialect. 4 Owing chiefly to its intrinsic excellence, but partly no doubt to the accidental circumstance that

whole

field

of

Roman

it

covered the

work became

History, Livy's the standard source-book from which later writers

were to draw their materials. We have already seen how it was epitomized and excerpted. Other writers who took their historical data from Livy were Lucan a few lines, while others run to a length of several pages. Under Domitian a certain Mettius Pompusius made a collection of speeches by kings and generals which he took from 7 Liv} ( Suet. Dom. x. 3). 1 Suet. Calig. xxxiv. (cf. Schanz, p. 439.) 3 2 Ibid. x. i. 32. Quint. Inst. Or. vm. iii. 53. 4 Pollio was also severe upon Caesar, Ibid. vui. i. 3. and Sallust Catullus Cicero, !

xxiii

INTRODUCTION and

Silius Italicus, Asconius, Valerius Maximus, Frontinus, Floras, and the Greeks Cassius Dio and Plutarch. Avienus, in the fourth century, turned into iambic senarii, a tour deforce which has not Livy

come down Gelasius,

2

the sixth.

1

to us. In the fifth he is cited by Pope and the grammarian Priscian used him in Comparatively little read in the Middle

Ages, Livy found a warm admirer in Dante, who used in the second book of his De Monarchia, and in the Divina Commedia refers to him as " Livio

him

naively

.

.

che non erra."

.

3

The

Italians of the Renaissance

upon Livy's History with avidity. The poet Beccadelli sold a country-place to enable him to purPetrarch was chase a copy by the hand of Poggio. seized

who hoped for the recovery of the lost and decades, Pope Nicholas V. exerted himself withWith the emendations out avail to discover them. in Books XXI.-XXVI. by Laurentius Valla 4 the critical study of the text was inaugurated. The year 1469 saw the first printed edition of the History, which was produced in Rome. Early in the sixteenth century Machiavelli wrote his famous Discorsi sul among

those

Primo Libra

much

delle

Deche

di

Tito Livio.

It is

not too

to say that from the Revival of Learning to the

present time Livy has been generally recognized as The English one of the world's great writers. scholar Munro pronounced him owner of what is 1

2 3

xxiv

Servius on Virg. Aen. x. 388, Schanz, iv 2 Hertz, Frag. 12 (in his edition of Livy). Inferno, xxviii. 12.

4

Born

in

Rome,

.

i.

p. 20.

1407.

INTRODUCTION "perhaps the greatest prose style that has ever been written in any age or language," l and his history seemed to Niebuhr a "a. colossal masterpiece." 2 The qualities which gave Livy his lofty place in He was a highliterature are easily discovered. minded patriot, inspired with a genuine desire to

promote the welfare of his country. An idealist of the most pronounced type, he was endowed as not with a breadth of sympathy which all idealists are enabled him to judge

men

with charity, and to discern

the most diverse characters whatever admirable In him a passionate love traits they might possess. in

of noble deeds and a rare insight into the workings of the mind and heart were united with a strength of

imagination which enabled him to clothe the shadowy names of Rome's old worthies with the flesh and blood of living men.

Finally, his mastery of all the resources

of language is only equalled by his never-failing tact and sense of fitness in the use of them. 3 It is difficult to describe in a few 1

Criticisms

words so complex an instrument

and Elucidations of

Catullus,

8 London, 1905

,

p. 232.

See the Introduction to his Roman History. I have taken most of the material for this paragraph from Schanz, pp. 438-441. 3 Wachsmuth, Einhitung in das" Studium der alien No one even now can Geschichte, p. 591. Wachsmuth says escape the magic of his enthralling narrative, and to his countrymen, whether contemporary or of a later generation, We are not his style must have been absolutely fascinating. surprised that Latin-speaking mankind in the time of the Empire saw the ancient history of Rome almost exclusively through the eyes of Livy." 8

:

XXV

INTRODUCTION as Livy's style.

Perhaps

it

might

fairly

be said that

distinguished by the attributes of warmth and The Livian period, less formal and amplitude. it is

regular than that of Cicero, whom Livy so greatly ad1 mired, is fully as intricate, and reveals an amazing sensitiveness to the rhetorical possibilities inherent in word-order. 2

To the

first

decade, and especially

Livy has, consciously no doubt, given a and poetical colour, in keeping with archaic slightly and his extraordinary faculty the subject-matter 3

Book

I.,

;

and dramatizing the men and events of Roman story reminds us even more insistently of Quintilian's dictum that history is a kind of for visualizing

4

prose poetry.

Yet despite

his

many remarkable

only too

gifts it is

clear that Livy was deficient in some of the most essential qualifications for producing such a history of Rome as would satisfy the standards of our own day.

Neither well informed nor specially interested in the art of war, and lacking even such

politics or

practical knowledge of constitutional matters as scores of his contemporaries must have gained from partici-

pating in the actual business of the state, he undertook to trace the development of the greatest military Quint. In*t. Or. x. i. 39 Sen. Suns. vi. 17 and 22. H. D. Naylor, Latin and English Idiom, p. 6, says "If I were asked 'What is the great feature of Livy'e His brilliant use of I would boldly answer style ? 1

;

2

:

'

'

:

oi'der." 4

s

Norden, Antike Knnstprosa

Quint. In*t. Or. x.

poetis et

XXVI

i.

quodam modo

Historia carmen solutum. 31.

i.,

est

p. 235. .

.

.

proxima

INTRODUCTION power (save one) that the world has ever seen, and the growth of an empire which has taught the and government to all principles of organization lack of technical knowwas this Nor succeeding ages. ledge the only or indeed the heaviest handicap that His mind was fundaLivy was compelled to carry. unable to subject his he was and uncritical, mentally authorities to such a judicial examination as might have made it possible for him to choose the safer guides

and reject the less trustworthy. Towards original documents he manifests an almost incredible indifferAs regards the earlier period, he himself ence. 1 remarks that the Gauls in burning Rome had swept " " away the pontifical commentaries and pretty much 2 all the other public and private records, but there is nothing to indicate that he made much use of even such shreds of evidence as survived the fire, or that he referred, in writing of a later period, to so

important a source as the Annales Maximi, though they had been published in 123 B.C., in eighty books, by P. Mucius Scaevola. He excuses himself from transcribing the expiatory hymn composed by Livius Andronicus, and publicly sung, in the year 207 B.C.,

by a chorus of

modern

taste. 3

a thing too uncouth for seems never to have bothered

girls, as

He

" On ne trouve 1 Taine says pas [chez Titc Live] 1'amour 11 absolue. infatigable de la science complete et de la verite " n'en a que le gout ; il n'en a pas la passion (Essai sur Tite Live, p. 64). 2 Liv. vi. i. 2. 8 Liv. xxvu. xxxvii. 13. :

xxvn

INTRODUCTION to examine the terrain of so important a battle as Cannae, and his account of the operations there shows that he had no very clear notion of the topography of the field. It would be easy to multiply There is an example at n. xli. 10, where instances.

he refers to an inscription, but without having himit, as his contemporary, Dionysius of

self consulted

1 Halicarnassus, did.

Livy's history supplanted the works of the annalists, which have consequently perished, so that it is impossible to ascertain with exactness his relation to His own references to them are rather his sources. casual. ities

He makes

no attempt to indicate

systematically, but cites

where they

conflict

them

his author-

in certain cases

with one another, or where he is and does not choose to

sceptical of their statements

assume the responsibility for them. 2 Often he does not give names, but contents himself with a phrase For like, "men say," or "I find in certain writers." the first decade he derived his materials from a number of annalists. The oldest were Q. Fabius Pictor and L. Cincius Alimentus. Both men wrote in Greek and lived in the time of the war with Hannibal, in which both

men fought. Another was L. Calpurnius Piso who opposed the Gracchi and was consul in

Frugi,

Dion. Hal. Antiq. Rom.

iv. xxvi. and vni. xxvii. Dionyof each other, though common used sources. they 2 A. Klotz, "Zu den Quellen der 4 tei und 5 ten Dekade des Livius" in Hermes, 1. (1915), pp. 482 and 536. 1

sius

and Livy worked independently

xxviii

INTRODUCTION 133.

Cato's valuable history, the Origines^he seems came to treat of the events

L

not to have used until he in

which Cato himself played a

who

part.

It

was to writers

own

day, whose style caused above their less sophisticated but

lived nearer his

Livy to rank them no doubt far more trustworthy predecessors that he mainly resorted. Such were Valerius Antias, whose seventy-five books were certainly the most abundant source available, and are thought to have covered the C. Licinius history of Rome to the death of Sulla Macer, tribune of the plebs in 73, who wrote from the democratic standpoint and Q. Aelius Tubero, who took part in the Civil War on the side of ;

;

Pompey, and brought down

his annals to his

own

times. 3

For the third decade Livy used Polybius, though whether directly or through a Roman intermediary, and whether for the whole or only a part of the ten For this decade books, are questions still sub iudice.

he also drew upon L. Coelius Anti pater, a writer whose treatise on the Second Punic War in seven

He composed a comprehensive chronicle of Roman events seven books, written in Latin. 2 This work, also in seven books, beginning with the Aeneas-legend and coming down to the year of the author's death, 149 B.C., should have been of the greatest use to Livy. 3 Polybius was born about 210 B.C., in Megalopolis, where he died at the age of 82. His great philosophical history of the Romans, from the outbreak of the Second Punic War to the fall of Corinth, in 14Q B.C., contained forty books. Only i.-v. are extant in their entirety, but we have extracts from 1

in

vi.-xvm., and some fragments

of xix.-xl.

xxix

INTRODUCTION books

1

had introduced into Roman

literature the

genre of the historical monograph. In the fourth and fifth decades Livy's main reliance

seems to have been Polybius, in describing eastern 2 affairs, and the annalists Q. Claudius Quadrigarius and Valerius Antias, in treating of Italy and Spain. A recent critic 3 has found reason for thinking that Livy used Valerius as his chief authority for western matters (controlling his statements however by those of Claudius) until, coming to the prosecution of Scipio he found so much in Valerius (see Book XXXVIII),

that his mistrust, which had hitherto been confined to that annalist's reports of numbers (see e.g. xxxin. x. 8.) caused him to take

that was incredible

Claudius thenceforth for his principal guide. This unscientific attitude towards the sources was

the product partly of Livy's own characteristics, partly of the conception of history as a means of edification and entertainment prevalent in ancient times. 4 Another shortcoming, which would have to be insisted

on

if

we were

contemporary,

criticising is

him

as

though he were a

his inability to clear his mind of to his own day in considering the

ideas belonging men and institutions of the past, though this again is a limitation which he shares with his age.

Written after the death of C. Gracchus, in 121 B.C. Claudius wrote of the period from the Gallic invasion to his own times, the Sullan age. His work had not fewer than 3 A. Klotz, op. cit., p. 533. 23 books. 4 Cic. De Quint. Inst. Or. x. i. 31 ; Plin. Ep. v. viii. 9 1

2

;

Oral.

XXX

ii.

59.

INTRODUCTION It is evident that the student of history must use Livy with caution, especially in those portions of his work where his statements cannot be tested by com-

parison with those of Polybius.

Yet, quite apart

from his claims upon our attention as a supreme literary artist, it would be hard to overrate his importance as an historian, which is chiefly of two sorts. In the first place, uncritical though he is, we have no one to put in his place, and his pages are our best authority for long stretches of Roman In the second place he possesses a very history. positive excellence to

add to

this accidental one, in

the fidelity and spirit with which us the Roman's own idea of Rome.

he depicts

Any one

for

of half

would have served as well as Livy what the Romans did, but it required genius to make us realize as Livy does what the Romans were. No mere critical use of documents could ever a dozen annalists

to tell us

make the Roman

character live again as

it lives

for

us in his "pictured page." The People and the State are idealized no doubt by the patriotic imagination of this extraordinary writer, but a people's ideals are surely not

the least significant part

of

their

1

history. 1

See Mr. Duffs excellent remarks in the finely appreciaon Livy in his Literary History of Rome.

tive chapter

XXXI

INTRODUCTION

IV

We have

seen that each of the extant decades was

handed down

in a separate tradition.

The manu-

scripts of the later portions will be briefly described in introductory notes to the volumes in which they

Books I.-X. are preserved in a twoOne family is represented by a 7 Verona the The portion palimpsest (J ). single MS., of this codex which contains the Livy consists of sixty leaves, on which are preserved fragments of Books III. -VI., written in uncial characters of the These fragments were deciphered fourth century. and The published by Mommsen in 1868. the so-called is other Nichomachean. family This edition, as it may be called, of the first decade was produced under the auspices of Q. Aurelius Symmachus, who was consul in 391 A.D. He appears to have commissioned Tascius Victorianus to prepare an amended copy of Books I.-X., and the latter's subscription (Victorianus emendabam dominis Symmachis) In is found after every book as far as the ninth. Books VI. -VI 1 1. the subscription of Victorianus is preceded by one of Nichomachus Flavianus, son-inare contained. fold

MS.

tradition.

law of Symmachus (Nichomachus Flavianus

v. c.

III.

apud Hennain), and in Books III.-V. by one of Nichomachus Dexter, a son of Flavianus (Till Livi Nichomachus Dexter v.c. emendavi ab

prdefect,

xxxii

urbis emendavi

INTRODUCTION urbe condita),

who adds

the information, in subscribing

V., that

he had used the copy of his kinsman

Clementianus.

To this origin all the MSS. now extant

Book

exception of the Veronensis. of the family is the Mediceus,

are referred, with the

The most famous member

a minuscule codex of the tenth or eleventh century

containing the ten books and

written with great even in absurdities to its exemplar. It has been shown to be the work of at least three The MS. abounds with dittographies and scribes. other errors, but is possibly the most valuable of its For a full description class, because of its honesty. fidelity

of this and the other

Nichomachean MSS. the reader

should consult the Oxford edition of Livy, Books I.-V., by Conway and Walters. A list of all the MSS. used given at the end of this introduction. edited by Andreas, afterwards In Bishop of Aleria, was issued in Rome in 1469. 1518 came the Aldine edition. The first complete

in that edition is

The

editio princeps,

now

edition of all the books

extant was also brought

out at Rome, in 1616, by Lusignanus. editions may be mentioned those of

Of modern Gronovius,

Leyden, 1645 and 1679 Drakenborch (with notes of Duker and others, and the supplements of Freinsheimius), Leyden, 1738-1746 Alschefski, Berlin, 1841-1846 (critical edition of Books I.-X. and XXI.-XXIIL), and Berlin, 1843-44 (text of Books I.-X. and XX I. -XXX.) Madvig and Ussing, Copen;

;

;

hagen

4

1886

,

ff,

(Madvig's Emendationes Livianae

a

xxxiii

VOL.

I

B

INTRODUCTION had appeared at Copenhagen Weissenborn (Teubner text, revised by M. Miiller and W. Heraeus) Leipsic, 1881 ff.; Luclis, Books XXI.-XXV. and XXVI.-XXX., Berlin, 1888-1889 (best critical apZingerle, Leipsic, 1888paratus for third decade) 1908; Weissenborn and H. J. Miiller, Berlin, 18801909 (best explanatory edition of the whole of Livy, with German notes the several volumes are more classic

of criticism

in 1860);

Hertz, Leipsic, 1857-1863

;

;

;

or less frequently republished in revised editions) M. Muller, F. Luterbacher, E. Wolfflin, H. J. Miiller,

;

and

F. Friedersdorff (Books I.-X.

and XXI.-XXX.,

separate volumes, with German notes) Leipsic, various dates Books I. and II. are in their second edition ;

by W. Heraeus). Of the numerous editions of parts of the first decade which are provided with English notes may be cited Book I. by Sir J. Seeley, Oxford, 1874; by H. J. Edwards, Cambridge, 1912 Books I. and II. by J. B.

(II.

:

;

Greenough, Boston, 1891 Book II. by R. S. Con way, Books II. and III. by H. M. Cambridge, 1901 Stephenson, London, 1882 Book III. by P. Thoresby Jones, Oxford, 1914 Book IV. by H. M. Stephenson, Cambridge, 1890 Books V.-VII. by A. R. Cluer and 2 Book IX. by W. B. P. E. Matheson, Oxford, 1904 ;

;

;

;

;

;

Anderson, Cambridge, For the first decade and Walters, of which the Oxford University xxxiv

1909.

the

critical edition

by Con way

half was published by Press in 1914, is the standard.

the

first

INTRODUCTION There are translations of the whole of Livy by Philemon Holland, London, 1600 by George Baker, London, 1797 and by Rev. Canon Roberts, now in ;

;

course of publication in Everyman's Library, London,

1912 ff. Books XXI. -XXV. have been done by A. J. Church and W. J. Brodribb, London, 1890. Of books concerned wholly or in part with Livy H. Taine, Essai the following may be mentioned J. Wight Duff, A Literary sur Tile Live, Paris, 1856 History of Rome, London and New York, 1909; O. Riemann, Etudes sur la Langue et la Grammaire de :

;

Tile-Live, Paris, 1885; C. Wachsmuth, Einleitung in das Studium der alien Geschichte, Leipsic, 1895 ; H. Darnley Naylor, Latin and English Idiom, an Object

from Livy's Preface, and More Latin and 1909 and 1915. English Idiom, Cambridge, For further information about the bibliography of Lesson

and

mass of

pamphlets Livy, including the great student may consult Schanz, periodical articles, the 3 Geschichle der romischen Lilteralur ii. I , Munich, 1911 (in

Iwan

von

Miiller's

Handbuch der

Klassischen

Alterlumsmissenschaft) and the various Jahresberichle, lists by H. J. Miiller and others, which Schanz

on

p.

See

418. also:

Commentary on Books

I.-V.

by R. M.

Text of Livy by Ogilvie, Oxford, 1965; Complete Conway, Walters, Johnson, MacDonald, Oxford, still in progress.

xxxv

INTRODUCTION THE MANUSCRIPTS

F= Veronensis, 4th century. F Floriacensis, 9th century. P= Parisiensis, 10th century.

E= Einsiedlensis,

10th century. 10th century. Bambergensis, 10th or llth century. Af=Mediceus, 10th or llth century. Form. = Vormatiensis (as reported by Rhenanus). Romanus, llth century. Upsaliensis, llth century. = Dominicanus, llth or 12th century. L = Leidensis, 12th century.

//= Harleianus

B=

prior,

R= U= D

A = Aginnensis,

M M 1

2

etc.

13th century. denote corrections made by the original

scribe

or a later

impossible is

D=

all

to

corrector.

When

identify the corrector

it

is

M

x

employed. or

some of the above MSS.

= later part of A, 14th century. S = one or more of the inferior MSS

a

and early

editions.

ABBREVIATIONS Aid. ) = the Aldine

Aid. (or ed. = Cassiodorius.

edition, Venice, 1518.

Cassiod.

= The Classical Quarterly, London, = Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum, vol. 2

Class. Qtiarf.

C.I.L.

i.

1893-5. Diod. Dion. xxxvi

= Diodorus Siculus. Hal. = Dionysius of

Halicarnassus.

1907

ff.

Berlin,

LIVY FROM THE FOUNDING OF THE CITY

BOOK

I

T.

LIVI

AB URBE CONDITA

LIBER

I

PRAEFATIO

FACTURUSNE operae pretium sim, 1 si a primordio urbis res populi Roman! perscripserim, nee satis scio, 2 nee, si sciam,

dicere ausim, quippe qui

turn volgatam esse

scriptores aut in rebus certius

aut 3

scribendi

credunt.

arte

virili

rudem

Utcumque

gestarum memoriae parte

et

cum veterem

rem videam, dum novi semper

erit,

aliquid allaturos

vetustatem iuvabit

se

superaturos

tamen

rerum

principis terrarum populi pro

ipsum consuluisse et si in tanta mea fnma in obscuro sit, nobilitate ;

scriptorum turba ac magiiitudirie 4 consoler.

Res

eorum me qui nomini officient meo immensi operis, ut

est praeterea et

quae supra septingentesimum annum repetatur, et 1 operae pretium sim Sabellicus (from Quint, sim operae pretium A.

2

ix. iv. 74)

:

LIVY FROM THE FOUNDING OF THE CITY

BOOK

I

PREFACE

WHETHER I am likely to accomplish anything worthy of the labour, if I record the achievements of the Roman people from the foundation of the city, I do not really know, nor if I knew would I dare to avouch it perceiving as I do that the theme l is not ;

only old but hackneyed, through the constant succession of new historians, who believe either that in their facts they can produce more authentic information, or that in their style they will prove better than the rude attempts of the ancients. Yet, however this shall be, it will be a satisfaction to have done self as much as lies in to commemorate

my-

and

if in

me

deeds of the foremost people of the world

;

the

of writers my own reputation consolation would be the fame and greatness of those whose renown will throw mine into the shade. Moreover, my subject involves infinite labour, seeing that it must be traced back so

vast a

should

company

be obscure,

my

1 Some scholars take rem to mean "the practice," expressing confidence in one's ability.

c.

of

LIVY quae ab exiguis profecta laboret

sua

initiis

eo creverit ut iam

et

magnitudine legentium plerisque baud dubito quin primae origines proximaque originibus minus praebitura voluptatis sint, festinantibus ;

ad haec nova, quibus iam pridem praevalentis populi se ipsae conficiunt ego contra hoc quoque

5 vires

:

laboris

certe

petain, ut me a conspectu malonostra tot per annos vidit aetas, tantisper

praemium

rum quae

dum

non 6

mente repeto, avertam, curae quae scribentis animum, etsi

prisca ilia tota

omnis expers

flectere a vero, sollicitum

tamen

efficere posset.

Quae ante conditam condendamve urbem poeticis magis decora fabulis quam incorruptis rerum gestarum monumentis traduntur, ea nee adfirmare nee animo est. Datur haec venia antiquitati,

7 refellere in

ut miscendo tiora faciat

;

humana et

si

divinis primordia

urbium augus-

cui populo licere oportet

conse-

crare origines suas et ad deos referre auctores, ea belli gloria est populo Romano ut cum suum con-

Martem potissimum ferat humanae patiantur aequo animo

ditorisque sui parentem tarn et hoc gentes 8

quam imperium

patiuntur.

Sed haec

et his similia,

utcumque animadversa aut existimata erunt, baud ad ilia mihi 9 in magno equidem ponam discrimine :

pro se quisque acriter intendat animum, quae

vita,

Livy refers to the animosities inevitably aroused by who dealt with such thorny subjects as the civil wars, during the lifetime of many who had taken part in 1

writers

them.

BOOK

I

above seven hundred years, and that proceeding from slender beginnings it has so increased as now to be burdened by its own magnitude and at the same time I doubt not that to most readers the earliest origins and the period immediately succeeding them will give little pleasure, for they will be in haste to ;

reach these modern times, in which the might of a people which has long been very powerful is working I its own undoing. myself, on the contrary, shall seek in this an additional reward for my toil, that I may avert my gaze from the troubles which our age has been witnessing for so many years, so long at least as I am absorbed in the recollection of the brave days of old, free from every care which, even if it could not divert the historian's mind from the 1 truth, might nevertheless cause it anxiety. Such traditions as belong to the time before the city was founded, or rather was presently to be founded, and are rather adorned with poetic legends than based upon trustworthy historical proofs, I purpose neither to affirm nor to refute. It is the privilege of antiquity to mingle divine things with human, and so to add dignity to the beginnings of and if any people ought to be allowed to cities consecrate their origins and refer them to a divine source, so great is the military glory of the Roman People that when they profess that their Father and the Father of their Founder was none other than Mars, the nations of the earth may well submit to this also with as good a grace as they submit to Rome's dominion. But to such legends as these, ;

however they

my own

shall

be regarded and judged,

I shall,

Here part, attach no great importance. are the questions to which I would have every reader for

LIVY qui mores fuerint, per quos viros quibusque artibus

domi militiaeque

et

partum

et

auctum imperium

sit

;

labente delude paulatim disciplina velut desidentis 1 primo mores sequatur animo,, deinde ut magis magis-

que lapsi sint, turn ire coeperint praecipites, donee ad haec tempora quibus nee vitia nostra nee remedia pati 10

est.

possumus perventum

Hoc

in cognitione rerum salubre ac frugiferum, omnis te exempli documenta inde tibi in inlustri posita monumento intueri

est

illud

praecipue

;

quod imitere capias, inde foedum inceptu, foedum exitu, quod vites. Ceterum aut me amor negotii suscepti fallit, aut nulla umtuaeque

11

quam

rei

publicae

res publica nee maior nee sanctior nee bonis fuit, nee in quam civitatem tam

exemplis ditior

serae avaritia luxuriaque inmigraverint, nee ubi tanac tam diu paupertati ac parsimoniae honos

tus

Adeo quanto rerum minus,

tanto minus nuper divitiae avaritiam et abundantes voluptates desiderium per luxum atque libidinem pereundi perdendique omnia invexere. Sed querellae, ne turn quidem gratae futurae fuerit.

12 cupiditatis erat

cum 13

;

necessariae

forsitan

erunt,

tantae ordiendae rei absint

cum

;

ab

initio

certe

bonis potius omi-

nibus votisque et precationibus deorum dearumque, 1

desidentes

5-

:

discidentis

M

:

dissidentis (or dissiden-

tes) n. 1

2

The metaphor is from a decaying building. The monument Livy means is the body

achievements

6

(cf,

res in

1),

of a nation's " of a nation, in the " history

BOOK

I

what life and morals were through what men and by what policies, in peace and in war, empire was established and enthen let him note how, with the gradual larged relaxation of discipline, morals first gave way, as it were, then sank lower and lower, and finally began the downward plunge l which has brought us to the our vices present time, when we can endure neither

give his close attention like

;

;

nor their cure. history wholesome that you behold the lessons of every kind of experience set forth as on a conspicuous monument; 2 from these you may choose for

What

and

chiefly

profitable

makes the study of

is

this,

what to imitate, from yourself and for your own state these mark for avoidance what is shameful in the conception and shameful in the result. For the rest, either love of the task I have set myself deceives me, or no state was ever greater, none more righteous or richer in good examples, none ever was where avarice and luxury came into the social order so late, or where

humble means and thrift were so highly esteemed and so long held in honour. For true it is that the Of less men's wealth was, the less was their greed. late, riches have brought in avarice, and excessive and licence pleasures the longing to carry wantonness to the point of ruin for oneself and of universal destruction.

But complaints are sure to be disagreeable, even shall perhaps be necessary let the beginan enterprise have ning, at all events, of so great none. With good omens rather would we begin, and, if historians had the same custom which poets have,

when they

;

This he likens to a that objective sense of the word. monument of stone on which men's deeds are recorded.

LIVY si,

ut poetis,

nobis

quoque mos

esset,

libentius

inciperemus, ut orsis tantum operis successus prosperos darent.

lam primum omnium

I.

in ceteros

Troia capta duobus, Aeneae

satis constat

saevitum esse Troianos

:

Antenorique, et vetusti iure hospitii et quia pacis 2

reddendaeque Helenae semper auctores fuerunt, omne ius belli Achivos abstinuisse casibus deinde ;

variis

Antenorem cum multitudine

seditione ex Paphlagonia pulsi et

Enetum,

sedes et

qui

ducem

Pylaemene ad Troiam amisso quaerebant, intimum maris Hadriatici sinum, Euganeisque, qui inter mare Alpesque incolebant, pulsis, Enetos Troianosque eas tenuisse terras. Et in quern primum egressi sunt locum Troia vocatur, pagoque

rege

3 venisse in

nomen Aeneam ab

inde Troiano 4 appellati.

est

:

gens

simili clade

universa

Veneti

domo profugum,

sed ad maiora rerum initia ducentibus

fatis, primo Macedonian! venisse, inde in Sicilian! quaerentem sedes delatum, ab Sicilia classe ad Laurentem agrum

in

5 tenuisse.

Troia et huic loco

nomen

est.

Ibi egressi

quibus ab inmenso prope errore nihil praeter arma et naves superesset, cum praedam ex agris agerent, Latinus rex Aboriginesque, qui turn Troiani,

ea 6

ut

tenebant

loca,

ad

arcendam

vim advenarum

armati ex urbe atque agris concurrunt. 1

8

See the Iliad,

v. 576.

Duplex inde

BOOK

I.

First of

all,

then,

it

I.

is

i.

1-6

generally agreed that

when Troy was taken vengeance was wreaked upon the other Trojans, but that two, Aeneas and Antenor, were spared all the penalties of war by the Achivi, owing to long-standing claims of hospitality, and because they had always advocated peace and the giving back of Helen. They then experienced various vicissitudes. Antenor, with a company of Eneti who had been expelled from Paphlagonia in a revolution and were looking for a home and a leader for they had lost their king, Pylaemenes, at Troy l came to the inmost bay of the Adriatic. There, driving out the Euganei, who dwelt between the sea and the Alps, the Eneti and Trojans took possession of those lands. And in fact the place where they first landed is called Troy, and the district is therefore known as Trojan, while the people as a whole are called the Veneti. Aeneas, driven from home by a similar misfortune, but guided by fate to undertakings of greater conse-

quence, came first to Macedonia thence was carried, in his quest of a place of settlement, to Sicily and from Sicily laid his course towards the land of LaurenThis place too is called Troy. Landing there, turn. the Trojans, as men who, after their all but immeasurable wanderings, had nothing left but their swords and ships, were driving booty from the fields, when King Latinus and the Aborigines, who then occupied that country, rushed down from their city and their fields to repel with arms the violence of the inFrom this point the tradition follows two vaders. ;

;

L1VY Alii proelio victum Latinum pacem cum est. Aenea, deinde affinitatem iunxisse tradunt alii, cum

fama 7

:

instructae acies constitissent, priusquam signa canerent processisse Latinum inter primores ducemque

advenarum evocasse ad conloquium percunctatum deinde qui mortales essent, unde aut quo casu profecti doino quidve quaerentes in agrum Laurentinum l exissent, postquam audierit multitudinem Troianos esse, ducem Aeneam, filium Arichisae et Veneris, cremata patria domo profugos sedem condendaeque urbi locum quaerere, et nobilitatem admiratum gentis virique et animum vel bello vel ;

8

paci paratum, dextra data

fid

em

futurae amicitiae

Inde foedus ictum inter duces, inter exerAeneam apud Latinum citus salutationem factam

9 sanxisse.

;

Latinum apud penates decs domesticum publico adiunxisse foedus filia Aeneae Eci res utique Troianis in matrimonium data. spem adfirmat tandem stabili certaque sede finiendi erroris. Oppidum condunt Aeneas ab nomine uxoris Lavinium appellat. Brevi stirpis quoque virilis ex novo matrimonio fuit, cui Ascanium parentes dixere nomen. fuisse in hospitio

10

11

ibi

;

;

II.

petiti.

deinde Aborigines Troianique simul Turnus, rex Rutulorum, cui pacta Lavinia

Bello

ante adventum Aeneae fuerat, praelatum 1

Laurentinum n

:

Laurentera

MO

Z

sibi

adve-

DL$-.

1 This, in a nutshell, is the form of Jthe legend on which Virgil based Books vii.-xii. of the Aemid.

10

BOOK lines.

Some

I.

i.

6-n.

i

say that Latinus, having been defeated

made a peace with Aeneas, and later an alliance of marriage. 1 Others maintain that when the opposing lines had been drawn up, Latinus did not wait for the charge to sound, but advanced amidst his chieftains and summoned the captain of He then inquired what the strangers to a parley. men they were, whence they had come, what mishap had caused them to leave their home, and what they He in landing souffht O on the coast of Laurentum. O was told that the people were Trojans and their that leader Aeneas, son of Anchises and Venus their city had been burnt, and that, driven from home, they were looking for a dwelling-place and a Filled with site where they might build a city. wonder at the renown of the race and the hero, and at his spirit, prepared alike for war or peace, he gave him his right hand in solemn pledge of lasting friendThe commanders then made a treaty, and the ship. armies saluted each other. Aeneas became a guest there the latter, in the in the house of Latinus presence of his household gods, added a domestic in

the battle,

;

;

treaty to the public one, by giving his daughter in marriage to Aeneas. This event removed any doubt in the minds of the Trojans that they had brought their wanderings to an end at last in a permanent and settled habitation. They founded a town, which Aeneas named Lavinium, after his wife. In a short time, moreover, there was a male scion of the new

marriage, to Ascanius.

whom

his parents

gave the name of

II. War was then made upon Trojans and AboriTurnus was king of the Rutulians, and gines alike. to him Lavinia had been betrothed before the coming

ii

LIVY nam

aegre patieiis simul Aeneae Latinoque bellum Neutra acies laeta ex eo certamine abiit

2 intulerat.

:

victi Rutuli

3

:

ducem

victores Aborigines Troianique

Latinum amisere.

Inde Turnus

Rutulique

diffisi

rebus ad florentes opes Etruscorum Mezentiumque regem eorum confugiunt, qui Caere opulento turn

oppido imperitans, iam inde ab initio minime laetus novae origine urbis, et turn nimio plus quam satis

tutum esset 4

accolis

baud gravatim

socia

rem Troianam arma Rutulis

crescere iunxit.

ratus,

Aeneas,

adversus tanti belli terrorem ut animos Aboriginum sibi conciliaret,

nomine omnes 5 appellavit.

ac fide erga

nee sub eodem hire solum sed etiam essent,

Latinos utramque

Nee deinde Aborigines regem Aeneam

cessere.

gentem

Troianis studio

Fretusque his

animis coalescentium in dies magis duorum popu-

lorum Aeneas, quamquam tanta opibus Etruria erat ut iam non terras solum sed mare etiam per totam longitudinem ab Alpibus ad fretum Siculum fama nominis sui inplesset, tamen, cum rnoenibus Italiae

6

bellum propulsare posset, in aciem copias eduxit. Secundum inde proelium Latinis, Aeneae etiam

ultimum operum mortalium

1

12

Virgil

makes Jupiter grant,

fuit.

Situs est,

quem-

as a favour to Juno, that

BOOK

I. ii.

1-6

of Aeneas. Indignant that a stranger should be preferred before him, he attacked, at the same time, both Aeneas and Latinus. Neither army came off rejoicing from that battle. The Rutulians were beaten the victorious Aborigines and Trojans lost their leader Latinus. Then Turnus and the Rutulians, discouraged at their situation, fled for succour to the opulent and powerful Etruscans and their king Mezentius, who held sway in Caere, at that time an important town. Mezentius had been, from the very beginning, far from pleased at the birth of the new city ; he now felt that the Trojan state was growing much more :

rapidly than was altogether safe for its neighbours, and readily united his forces with those of the Rutulians. Aeneas, that he might win the good-

of the Aborigines to confront so formidable an array, and that all might possess not only the same rights but also the same name, called both nations Latins; 1 and from that time on the Aborigines were no less ready and faithful than the Trojans in the service of King Aeneas. Accordingly, trusting to this friendly spirit of the two peoples, which were growing each day more united, and, despite the power of Etruria, which had filled with the glory of her name not only the lands but the sea as well, along the whole extent of Italy from the Alps to the Sicilian Strait, Aeneas declined to defend himself behind his walls, as he might have done, but led out his troops to battle. The fight which ensued was a victory for the Latins for Aeneas it was, besides, the last of his mortal will

:

labours. the

He lies buried, whether it is fitting and right

Trojan name shall be sunk in

the Latin

(At.n.

xii.

835).

13

LIVY cumque eum dici ius fasque est, super Numicum flumen lovem indigetem appellant. III. Nondum maturus imperio Ascanius Aeneae tamen id imperium ei ad puberem aetafilius erat tem incolume mansit tantisper tutela muliebri :

;

;

tanta indoles in Lavinia erat 2

res Latina et

regnum

avitum paternumque puero stetit. Haud ambigam quis enim rem tarn veterem pro certo adfirmet ? hicine fuerit Ascanius an maior quam hie, Creusa

matre

Ilio

incolumi natus comesque inde paternae

lulum eundem lulia gens auctorem Is Ascanius, ubicumque et nominis sui nuncupat. quacumque matre genitus certe natum Aenea conabundante Lavini multitudine florentem iam, stat fugae, quern

3

ut turn res erant, atque opulentam urbem matri seu novam ipse aliam sub Albano novercae reliquit :

monte 4

condidit, quae ab situ porrectae in dorso urbis l

Longa Alba appellata. Inter Lavinium conditum Albam Longam coloniam deductam triginta ferme Tantum tamen opes creverant, interfuere anni. maxime fusis Etruscis,, ut ne morte quidem Aeneae

et

nee deinde inter muliebrem tutelam rudimentumque primum puerilis regni movere arma aut Mezentius 5

Pax ita Etruscique aut ulli alii accolae ausi sint. convenerat ut Etruscis Latinisque fluvius Albula, 1

Lavinium conditum Harant

:

Lavinium

fl.

1 Indiges means "of or belonging to a certain place" Dion. Hal. i. 64, that the (Fowler, Feat. p. 192). says Latins made a shrine to Aeneas with an inscription in which

BOOK

I. ii.

6-in. 5

term him god or man, on the banks of the river Numicus men, however, call him Jupiter Indiges. 1 III. Ascanius, Aeneas' son, was not yet ripe for authority yet the authority was kept for him, unMeanwhile, impaired, until he arrived at manhood. under a woman's regency, the Latin State and the kingdom of his father and his grandfather stood unshaken so strong was Lavinia's character until to

;

;

the boy could claim it. I shall not discuss the question -for who could affirm for certain so ancient a matter? -whether this boy was Ascanius, or an elder brother, born by Creusa while Ilium yet stood, who accompanied his father when he fled from the city, being the same whom the Julian family call lulus and claim as the author of their name. This Ascanius, no matter where born, or of what mother it is agreed in any case that he was Aeneas' son left Lavinium, when its population came to be too large, for it was already a flourishing and wealthy city for those days, to his mother, or stepmother, and founded a new city himself below the Alban Mount. This was known from its position, as it lay stretched out along the ridge, by the name of Alba Longa. From the settlement of Lavinium to the planting of the colony at Alba Longa was an interval of some thirty years. Yet the nation had grown so powerful, in consequence especially of the defeat of the Etruscans, that even when Aeneas died, and even when a woman became its regent and a boy began his apprenticeship as king, neither Mezentius and his Etruscans nor any other Peace had been neighbours dared to attack them. agreed to on these terms, that the River Albula, which men now call the Tiber, should be the boundary he was called irar^p xQ^vios (Pater Indiges). called

Deus Indiges and Aeneas

He was

also

Indiges.

15

LIVY 6

7

8

Silvius quern nunc Tiberim vocant, finis esset. delude regnat, Ascanii filius, casu quodam in silvis natus. Is Aeneam Silvium creat is deinde Latinum Ab eo coloniae aliquot deductae, Prisci Silvium. Mansit Silviis postea omnibus cogLatini appellati. nomen qui Albae regnarunt. 1 Latino Alba ortus, ;

Alba Atys, Atye Capys,

Capye Capetus, Capeto 2 Tiberinus, qui in traiectu Albulae amnis submersus 9 celebre ad posteros nomen flumini dedit. Agrippa inde Tiberini films, post Agrippam Romulus Silvius Aventino fulmine a patre accepto imperio regnat. Is sepultus ipse ictus regnum per manus tradidit. in eo colle, qui nunc pars Romanae est urbis, cogno10

men

Proca deinde regnat. colli fecit. Is Numitorem atque Amulium procreat Numitori, qui stirpis maximus erat, regnum vetustum Silviae gentis legat. ;

Plus 11

tamen

vis potuit

quam

voluntas patris aut vere-

Addit pulso fratre Amulius regnat. sceleri scelus: stirpem fratris virilem interemit 3 cuiidia aetatis

:

:

fratris filiae

Reae

Vestalem earn

Silviae per speciem honoris,

legisset,

perpetua virginitate spem

4 partus adimit. IV. Sed debebatur, ut opinor,

urbis

fatis

tantae origo

maximique secundum deorum opes imperil

2 principium.

partum

Vi compressa Vestalis,

cum geminum

edidisset, seu ita rata, seu quia

Martem

culpae honestior erat, 1

2 3 4

16

cum

regnarunt traiectu

interemit

adimit

H

ft

:

R Z D* fl :

:

deus auctor

incertae stirpis patrem

regnaverunt M. (or

D

l

)

ademit

:

traiecto n.

M01HR. UOE\

interimit

BOOK

I.

HI. 5-iv. 2

between the Etruscans and the Latins. Next Silvius reigned, son of Ascanius, born, as it chanced, in the forest.

Silvius.

He

begat Aeneas Silvius, and he Latinus

By him

several colonies

called the Ancient Latins.

were planted, and

Thereafter the cognomen who ruled at Alba. From

was retained by all Latinus came Alba, from Alba Atys, from Atys Capys, from Capys Capetus, from Capetus Tiberinus. This last king was drowned in crossing the River Albula, and gave the stream the name which has been current with later generations. Then Agrippa, son of TibeSilvius

and after Agrippa Romulus Silvius was king, having received the power from his father. Upon the death of Romulus by lightning, the kingThis king was ship passed from him to Aventinus. buried on that hill, which is now a part of the City of Rome, and gave his name to the hill. Proca ruled He begat Numitor and Amulius to Numitor, next. the elder, he bequeathed the ancient realm of the Yet violence proved more potent Silvian family. rinus, reigned,

;

than a father's wishes or respect for seniority. Amulius drove out his brother and ruled in his stead. Adding crime to crime, he destroyed Numitor's male and Rhea Silvia, his brother's daughter, he issue appointed a Vestal under pretence of honouring her, and by consigning her to perpetual virginity, deprived her of the hope of children. IV. But the Fates were resolved, as I suppose, upon the founding of this great City, and the beginning of the mightiest of empires, next after ;

The Vestal was ravished, and that of Heaven. having given birth to twin sons, named Mars as the father of her doubtful offspring, whether actually so believing, or because it seemed less wrong if a god

LIVY 3

Sed nee

nuncupat.

dii

nee homines aut ipsam aut

stirpem a crudelitate regia vindicant in custodiam datur 4 mitti

iubet.

:

Forte

sacerdos vincta

:

pueros in profluentem

quadam

aquam

divinitus

super ripas Tiberis etfusus lenibus stagnis nee adiri usquam ad iusti

5

cursum poterat amnis

mergi aqua

infantes

et posse

spem

quamvis languida

ferentibus dabat.

Ita,

velut defuncti regis imperio, in proxima alluvie ubi

nunc

ficus Rtiminalis est

Romularem vocatam

ferunt

Vastae turn in his locis solipueros exponunt. Tenet fama, cum fluitantem alveum tudines erant.

quo expositi erant pueri tenuis in sicco aqua destilupam sitientem ex montibus qui circa sunt

tuisset,

ad puerilem vagitum cursum flexisse earn summissas infantibus adeo mitem praebuisse mammas ut lingua ;

lambentem pueros magister

nomen

regii pecoris invenerit

Ab

eo ad stabula

7

Faustulo fuisse

8

Sunt qui Larentiam 1 vulgato corpora lupam inter pastores vocatam putent hide locum fabulae ac miraculo datum. Ita Larentiae

l

ferunt.

uxori educandos datos.

:

geniti itaque educati,

cum primum

in stabulis nee ad pecora segnes,

Hinc robore corporibus animisque sumpto

9 saltus. 1

1

Larentiae (-am)

MDL

:

Laurentiae (-am) n.

The word hq)a was sometimes used

" courtesan." 18

adolevit aetas, nee

venando peragrare

in

the

sense

of

BOOK

I. iv.

2-9

were the author of her fault. But neither gods nor men protected the mother herself or her babes from the priestess he ordered to be the king's cruelty manacled and cast into prison, the children to be committed to the river. It happened by singular good fortune that the Tiber having spread beyond its banks into stagnant pools afforded nowhere any access to the regular channel of the river, and the men who brought the twins were led to hope that being infants they might be drowned, no matter how sluggish the stream. So they made shift to ;

discharge the king's command, by exposing the babes at the nearest point of the overflow, where the formerly, they say, called Romufig-tree Ruminalis laris now stands. In those days this was a wild The story persists that and uninhabited region. when the floating basket in which the children had been exposed was left high and dry by the receding water, a she-wolf, coming down out of the surrounding hills to slake her thirst, turned her steps towards the cry of the infants, and with her teats gave them suck so gently, that the keeper of the royal flock found her licking them with her tongue. Tradition assigns to this man the name of Faustulus, and adds that he carried the twins to his hut and gave them to his wife Larentia to rear. Some think that Larentia, having been free with her favours, had got the name of " she-wolf" among the shepherds, and that this gave rise to this marvellous story. 1 The boys, thus born and reared, had no sooner attained to youth than they began yet without neglecting the farmstead or the flocks to range the glades of the

mountains for game. Having in this way gained both strength and resolution, they would now not 19

LIVY iam non

feras

tantum

subsistere, sed

latrones

in

praeda onustos impetus facere pastoribusque rapta dividere et cum his crescente in dies grege iuvenum seria ac iocos celebrare.

V. Iam turn in Palatio monte Lupercal hoc fuisse ludicrum ferunt et a Pallanteo, urbe Arcadica, Pal-

montem appellatum. Ibi eo ex Euandrum, qui genere Arcadum multis ante tenuerit loca, sollemne adlatum ex tempestatibus

2 lantium,

dein

Palatium

Arcadia instituisse ut nudi iuvenes Lycaeum Pana venerantes per lusum atque lasciviam currerent, 3 quern Romani deinde vocarunt Inuum. Huic deditis

cum sollemne notum esset, insidiatos ob iram praedae amissae latrones, cum Romulus vi se defen-

ludicro,

disset,

Remum

cepisse,

Crimini

4 disse ultro accusantes.

Numitoris agros ab

6

captum regi Amulio

iis

impetus

tradi-

maxime dabant l

fieri

;

in

inde eos

collecta

iuvenum manu hostilem

in

modum

praedas

agere.

Sic Numitori ad supplicium

Remus

deditur.

Iam inde ab

initio

Faustulo spes fuerat regiam

stir-

nam et expositos iussu regis pern apud se educari infantes sciebat, et tempus quo ipse eos sustulisset ;

ad

id

ipsum congruere 1

;

sed rem inmaturam nisi aut

impetus Gronovius

:

impetum

A.

1 The derivation here given is fanciful. The word is pro" fenced " place." pale," and meant a bably akin to palus,

20

BOOK

I.

iv.

9-v. 5

only face wild beasts, but would attack robbers laden with their spoils, and divide up what they took from them among the shepherds, with whom they shared their toils and pranks, while their band of

young men grew larger every day. V. They say that the Palatine was even then the scene of the merry festival of the Lupercalia which we have to-day, and that the hill was named Pallantium, from Pallanteum, an Arcadian city, and then Palatium. 1 There Evander, an Arcadian of that stock, who had held the place many ages before the time of which I am writing, is said to have established the yearly rite, derived from Arcadia, that youths should run naked about in whom playful sport, doing honour to Lycaean Pan, the Romans afterwards called Inuus. When the young men were occupied in this celebration, the rite being generally known, some robbers who had been angered by the loss of their plunder laid an ambush for them, and although Romulus successfully defended himself, captured Remus and delivered up their prisoner to King Amulius, even lodging a comThe main charge was that the plaint against him.

made raids on the lands of Numitor, and with a band of young fellows which them, pillaged they had got together, like an invading enemy. So Remus was given up to Numitor to be punished. From the very beginning Faustulus had entertained the suspicion that they were children of the royal blood that he was bringing up in his house for he was aware both that infants had been exposed by order of the king, and that the time when he had himself taken up the children exactly coincided with But he had been unwilling that the that event. brothers

;

21

LIVY 1 per occasionem aut per necessitatem aperire noluita metu subactus Necessitas prior venit

6 erat.

;

Romulo

rein

custodia

Remum

Forte et

aperit.

aetatem eorum et ipsam

et

comparando

fratres,

minime servilem indolern

nepotum 7

sciscitandoque

;

Numitori, cuin in

haberet audissetque geminos esse

animum memoria

tetigerat

eodem

baud

pervenit, ut

Ita undique procul esset quin Remum agnosceret. Romulus non cum globo iuveregi dolus nectitur.

num

nee enim erat ad vim apertam par sed aliis iussis certo tempore ad regiam venire

alio itinere

pastoribus

ad

Numitoris

alia

regem impetum

facit,

domo

a

et

comparata manu adiuvat Remus.

Ita

2

VI. Numitor inter primum turegem obtruncat. multum hostis invasisse urbem atque adortos regiam dictitans, cum pubem Albanam in arcem praesidio

armisque obtinendam avocasset, postquam iuvenes perpetrata caede pergere ad se gfatulaiites vidit,

extemplo

advocate

concilio

scelera

in

se

fratris,

origiiiem nepotum, ut geniti, ut educati, ut cogniti essent,

caedem deinceps tyranni seque

eius

auctorem

Iuvenes per mediam coiitionem agmine avum regem salutassent, secuta ex omni cum ingressi multitudine consentiens vox ratum nomen imperi-

2 ostendit.

umque 1

3

22

regi

efficit.

aperire

PFUBOE

cLlruncat

fl

:

:

aperiri (app-

obtruncant

j-.

H)

MRDLH.

BOOK

I.

v. 5-vi. 2

matter should be disclosed prematurely, until opNecessity portunity offered or necessity compelled.

came first accordingly, driven by fear, he revealed It chanced that Numitor too, the facts to Romulus. having Remus in custody, and hearing that the brothers were twins, had been reminded, upon con;

sidering their age and their far from servile nature, The inquiries he made led him of his grandsons. to the same conclusion, so that he was almost ready

acknowledge Remus. Thus on every hand the were woven about the king. Romulus did not assemble his company of youths for he was not to

toils

equal to open violence but commanded his shepherds to come to the palace at an appointed time, some by one way, some by another, and so made his while from the house of attack upon the king Numitor came Remus, with another party which he ;

had got together, to help

his brother.

So Romulus

slew the king. VI. At the beginning of the fray Numitor exclaimed that an enemy had invaded the and drew off the active city and attacked the palace, men of the place to serve as an armed garrison for the defence of the citadel and when he saw the ;

after they had dispatched the king, to congratulate him, he at once summoned a council, and laid before it his brother's crimes

young men approaching,

against himself, the parentage of his grandsons, and how they had been born, reared, and recognised. He then announced the tyrant's death, and declared himself to be responsible for it. The brothers advanced with their band through the midst of the

crowd, and hailed their grandfather king, whereupon such a shout of assent arose from the entire throng as confirmed the new monarch's title and authority. 23

LIVY 3

Ita

Numitori Albana re permissa

mumque

cupido

cepit in

iis

1

Romulum

locis ubi expositi

Re-

ubique

Et supererat multi-

educati erant urbis condendae.

tudo Albanorum Latinorumque

;

ad

id pastores quo-

qui omnes facile spem facerent que parvam Albam, parvum Lavinium prae ea urbe quae accesserant,

Intervenit deinde his cogitationi-

4 conderetur fore.

bus avitum malum, regni cupido, atque inde foedum certamen, coortum a satis miti principio. Quoniam gemini essent nee aetatis verecundia discrimen facere posset, ut

dii,

legerent, qui

quorum

tutelae ea loca esseiit, auguriis urbi daret, qui conditam

nomen novae

imperio regeret, Palatium Romulus, Remus Aventimini ad inaugurandum templa capiunt. VII. Priori

A.U.C. 1

Remo augurium

venisse fertur, sex vultures, iamque

nuntiato augurio

cum duplex numerus Romulo

se

utrumque regem sua multitude consalutempore illi praecepto, at hi numero avium

ostendisset, 2 taverat

:

Inde

regnum trahebant.

cum

altercatione congressi

certamine irarum ad caedem vertuntur ictus fratris

Remus

;

ibi in

turba

Vulgatior fama est ludibrio inde ab novos transiluisse muros

cecidit.

Remum

;

Romulo, cum verbis quoque increpitans adiecisset " sic deinde, quicumque alius transiliet moenia mea," interfectum. Ita solus potitus imperio Romulus condita urbs conditoris nomine appellata. irato

3

;

1

iis 5-

:

his Q.

A form of the legend preserved by Dion. Hal. i. 87, and Ovid, Fasti, iv. 843, names Celer, whom Romulus had put in charge of the rising wall, as the slayer of Remus. 1

24

BOOK

I.

vi.

3-vn. 3

The Alban state being thus made over to Numitor, Romulus and Remus were seized with the desire to found a city in the region where they had been exposed and brought up. And in fact the population of Albans and Latins was too large besides, there were the shepherds. All together, their numbers might easily lead men to hope that Alba would be small, and Lavinium small, compared with the city which they should build. These considerations were interrupted by the curse of their grandsires, the greed of kingly power, and by a shameful quarrel which grew out of it, upon an occasion innocent enough. Since the brothers were twins, and respect for their age could not determine between them, it was agreed that the gods who had those places in their protection should choose by augury who should give the new city its name, who should govern it when built. Romulus took the Palatine for ;

his augural quarter, Remus the Aventine. VII. Remus said to have been the first to receive an augury,

is

from the flight of six vultures. The omen had been already reported when twice that number appeared to Romulus. Thereupon each was saluted king by his own followers, the one party laying claim to the honour from priority, the other from the number of the birds. They then engaged in a battle of words and, angry taunts leading to bloodThe shed, Remus was struck down in the affray. commoner story is that Remus leaped over the new

mockery of his brother, whereupon Romulus great anger slew him, and in menacing wise added these words withal, " So perish whoever else " l shall leap over my walls Thus Romulus acquired sole power, and the city, thus founded, was called by its founder's name. walls in in

!

25

B.C. 753

LIVY Palatium primum, in quo ipse erat educatus, muniit.

4

Sacra

ab Euandro

Albano

diis aliis

ritu,

Graeco Herculi, ut

Herculem

instituta erant, facit.

in ea

Geryone interempto boves mira specie abegisse memorant ac prope Tiberim fluvium, qua prae se loca

armentum agens nando

pabulo laeto reficeret

et

quiete 5

traiecerat, loco herbido, ut

fessum via procubuisse.

Ibi

boves,

cum eum

et

ipsum

cibo vinoque

gravatum sopor oppressisset, pastor accola eius loci, nomine Cacus, ferox viribus, captus pulchritudine bourn

cum

avertere

agendo armentum

earn

in

praedam

speluncam

vellet,

quia

si

compulisset ipsa

quaerentem dominum eo deductura erant, aversos boves, eximium quemque pulchritudine,

vestigia

6

Hercules ad primam caudis in speluncam traxit. auroram somno excitus cum gregem perlustrasset oculis et

partem abesse numero

sensisset, pergit

ad

proximam speluncam, si forte eo vestigia ferrent. Quae ubi omnia foras versa vidit nee in partem aliam ferre, confusus atque incertus animi ex loco infesto agere porro 7

actae boves

armentum

occepit.

quaedam ad desiderium,

ut

fit,

Inde cum relictarum

mugissent, reddita iiiclusarum ex spelunca bourn vox

Herculem 26

convertit.

Quern cum vadentem ad

spel-

BOOK

I.

vn. 3-7

His first act was to fortify the Palatine, on which he had himself been reared. To other gods he sacrificed after the Alban custom, but employed the Greek for Hercules, according to the institution of Evander.

The

Hercules, after slaying story is as follows Geryones, was driving off his wondrously beautiful cattle, when, close to the river Tiber, where he had swum across it with the herd before him, he found a green spot, where he could let the cattle rest and refresh themselves with the abundant grass and being tired from his journey he lay down himself. When he had there fallen into a deep sleep, for he was heavy with food and wine, a shepherd by the name of Cacus, who dwelt hard by and was insolent by reason of his strength, was struck with the beauty of the animals, and wished to drive them off as plunder. But if he had driven the herd into his cave, their tracks would have been enough to guide their owner to the place in his search he therefore chose out those of the cattle that were most remarkable for their beauty, and turning them the other way, dragged them into the cave by their tails. At daybreak Hercules awoke. Glancing over the herd, and :

;

;

perceiving that a part of their

number w as r

lacking,

he proceeded to the nearest cave, in case there might be foot-prints leading into it. When he saw that they were all turned outward and yet did not lead to any other place, he was confused and bewildered, and made ready to drive his herd away from that uncanny spot. As the cattle were being driven off,

some of them lowed, as usually happens, missing those which had been left behind. They were answered with a low by the cattle shut up in the cave, and this made Hercules turn back. Wlien he came towards the 27

B.C.

753

LIVY A.U.C. 1

uncam Cacus vi prohibere conatus esset, ictus clava fidem pastorum nequiquam invocans morte occubuit. 8 Euander turn ea profugus ex Peloponneso auctoritate magis quam imperio regebat loca, venerabilis vir miraculo litterarum, rei novae inter rudes artium homines, venerabilior divinitate credita Carmentae fatiloquam ante Sibyllae in Italiam miratae eae gentes fuerant. Is turn Euander concursu pastorum trepidantium circa ad-

quam

matris, 9

adventum

venam manifestae facinus

10

reurn

facinorisque

caedis

causam

excitus

audivit,

mamque

viri

Immana

intuens, rogitat qui vir esset.

postquam habitum for-

aliquantum ampliorem augustioremque

Ubi nomen " patremque ac patriam accepit, love nate, Hercules, salve/' inquit; "te mihi mater, veridica interpres

deum, aucturum caelestium numerum cecinit tibique aram hie dicatum iri quam opulentissima olim in gens maximam vocet tuoque ritu colat." DexHercules data accipere se omen inpleturumque

11 terris

tra

12 fata ara condita ac dicata ait.

Ibi turn

primum bove

eximia capta de grege sacrum Herculi 1 adhibitis ad ministerium dapemque 1 Potitiis ac Pinariis, quae turn familiae 1

1

28

maxime

Herculi

Evander

ia

.

.

.

inclitae

dapemque

ea loca incolebant,

MP*

:

omitted by

said to have invented the

Roman

fl.

alphabet.

BOOK

I.

vn. 7-12

would have prevented his approach with but received a blow from the hero's club, and calling in vain upon the shepherds to protect him, gave up the ghost. Evander, an exile from the Pelocave, Cacus force,

ponnese, controlled that region in those days, more through personal influence than sovereign power. He was a man revered for his wonderful invention of 1 letters, a new thing to men unacquainted with the arts, and even more revered because of the divinity which men attributed to his mother Carmenta, whom those tribes had admired as a prophetess before the Now this Evander was Sibyl's coming into Italy. then attracted by the concourse of shepherds, who, crowding excitedly about the stranger, were accusing him as a murderer caught red-handed. When he had been told about the deed and the reason for it, and had marked the bearing of the man and his figure, which was somewhat ampler and more august than a mortal's, he inquired who he was. Upon learning his name, his father, and his birth-place, he ex" You claimed, Hail, Hercules, son of Jupiter are he, of whom my mother, truthful interpreter of Heaven, foretold to me that you should be added to the number of the gods, and that an altar should be dedicated to you here which the nation one day to be the most powerful on earth should call the Greatest Altar, and should serve according to your rite." Hercules gave him his hand, and declared that he accepted the omen, and would fulfil the prophecy by establishing and dedicating an altar. Then and there men took a choice victim from the herd, and for the first time made sacrifice to Hercules. For the ministry and the banquet they employed the Potitii and the Pinarii, being the families !

29 VOL.

I.

c

B

LIVY A.U.C. i

Forte ita evenit, ut Potitii ad tempus praesto essent iisque exta apponerentur, Pinarii extis adesis ad ceteram venirent dapem. Inde iiistitutum man-

13 facturn.

donee Pinarium genus fuit, ne extis eorum sollemnium l vescerentur. Potitii ab Euandro edocti antistites sacri ems per multas aetates fueruiit, donee sit,

14

tradito servis publicis sollemni 15

familiae

ministerio

Haec turn sacra genus orane Potitiorum interiit. Romulus una ex omnibus peregrina suscepit, iam turn inmortalitatis virtute partae, 2 ad quam eum sua fata ducebant, fautor. VIII. Rebus divinis rite perpetratis vocataque ad concilium multitudine, quae coalescere in populi

unius corpus nulla re praeterquam legibus poterat, quae ita sancta generi hominum agresti

iura dedit

fore ratus fecisset 3

;

si

cum

se ipse venerabilem insignibus imperil cetero habitu se augustiorem, turn

maxime lictoribus duodecim sumptis fecit. Alii ab numero avium quae augurio regnum portenderant eum secutum numerum putant me baud paenitet eorum sententiae esse quibus et apparitores hoc3 genus ab Etruscis finitimis, unde sella curulis, unde :

toga praetexta sumpta

ipsum ductum 1

est,

eorum sollemnium Walters sollemnium M: sollemnibus

ft: 2 8 4

E

partae hoc genus et

:

numerum 4 quoque

et

placet, et ita habuisse Etruscos,

parta H. G'ronov.: et

numerum Htnmann

:

eo sollemnium (or

(or sol-

quod

the.

like.)

orsolempn-)FPUOtt.

hoc genus H. :

numerum

H.

For the story of Cacus and the origin of the Ara Maxima see also Virgil, Aen. viii. 182-279 ; Prop. iv. 9; Ovid, Fasti, 1

i.

3

543-586.

BOOK

I.

vn. 12-vni. 3

of most distinction then living in that region. It so fell out that the Potitii were there at the appointed time, and to them were served the inwards the ;

Pinarii

came

after the inwards

had been eaten,

in

season for the remainder of the feast. Thence came the custom, which persisted as long as the Pinarian family endured, that they should not partake of the inwards at that sacrifice. The Potitii, instructed by Evander, were priests of this cult for many generations, until, having delegated to public slaves the solemn function of their family, the entire stock of the Potitii died out. This was the only sacred observance, of all those of foreign origin, which Romulus then adopted, honouring even then the immortality won 1 by worth to which his own destiny was leading him. VIII. When Romulus had duly attended to the worship of the gods, he called the people together and gave them the rules of law, since nothing else but law could unite them into a single body politic. But these, he was persuaded, would only appear binding in the eyes of a rustic people in case he

should invest his own person with majesty, by adoptHe therefore put on a ing emblems of authority. more august state in every way, and especially by the assumption of twelve lictors. 2 Some think the twelve birds which had given him an augury of kingFor my part, ship led him to choose this number. I am content to share the opinion of those who derive from the neighbouring Etruscans (whence were borrowed the curule chair and purple-bordered toga) not only the type of attendants but their number as well a number which the Etruscans themselves are thought to have chosen because each 1 The lictors carried axes in bundles of rods, in readiness to execute the king's sentence of scourging and decapitation.

31

B.C.

753

LIVY ex duodecim populis communiter create rege

A.U.O. i

sin-

gulos singuli populi lictores dederint. 4 Crescebat interim urbs munitionibus alia atque alia adpetendo loca, cum in spem magis futurae multitudinis

quam ad

id

quod turn hominum erat

Deinde, ne vana urbis magnitude esset, adiciendae multitudinis causa vetere coiisilio conden-

6 munirent.

tium urbes, qui obscuram atque humilem conciendo ad se multitudinem natam e terra sibi prolem emen-

locum qui mine saeptus escendentibus 1 Eo ex finitimis est, asylum aperit. turba sine an servus discrimine liber omnis, populis esset, avida novarum rerum perfugit, idque primum ad coeptam magnitudinem roboris fuit. Cum iam tiebantur,

6 inter

7

duos lucos

haud paeniteret, consilium deinde viribus creat senatores, sive quia is numerus sive erat, quia soli centum erant qui creari

virium parat. satis

Centum

patres possent.

Patres certe ab honore, patriciique

progenies eorum appellati. ix. Iam res Romana adeo erat valida ut cuilibet

A.U.C. 1~~ O t

finitimarum civitatum bello par esset

2

;

sed penuria

mulierum hominis aetatem duratura magnitude erat, quippe quibus nee domi spes prolis nee cum finitimis eonubia essent. Turn ex consilio patrum Romulus legates 1

1

2

32

circa

vicinas

gentes misit, qui societatem

escendentibus Edwards

i.e.

:

descendentibus n.

the Capitoline.

As being heads

of clans, patres familiarum.

BOOK

I.

vin. 3-ix. 2

of the twelve cities which united to elect the king contributed one lictor. Meanwhile the City was expanding and reaching out its walls to include one place after another, for they built their defences with an eye rather to the population which they hoped one day to have than to the numbers they had then. Next, lest his big City should be empty, Romulus resorted to a plan for increasing the inhabitants which had long been employed by the founders of cities, who gather about them an obscure and lowly multitude and pretend that the earth has raised up sons to them. In the place which is now enclosed, between the two groves as you go up the hill/ he opened a sanctuary. Thither fled, from the surrounding peoples, a miscellaneous rabble, without distinction of bond or free, eager and these constituted the first for new conditions advance in power towards that greatness at which Romulus aimed. He had now no reason to be

B .c. 753

;

with his strength, and proceeded to add He appointed a hundred senators, whether because this number seemed to him sufficient, or because there were no more than a hundred who could be designated Fathers. 2 At all events, they received the designation of Fathers from their rank, and their descendants were called patricians. IX. Rome was now strong enough to hold her own in war with any of the adjacent states but owing to

dissatisfied

policy to strength.

;

the want of women a single generation was likely to see the end of her greatness, since she had neither prospect of posterity at home nor the right of intermarriage with her neighbours. So, on the advice of the senate, Romulus sent envoys round among all the neighbouring nations to solicit for the new people

33

B c-

LIVY A.T.C.

3

1-37

conubiumque novo populo ut

que.

cetera,

virtus ac 4

urbes quopeterent ex infimo nasci dein, quas 1 sua

nomen

di

scire

satis

;

sibi

magnas opes

iuvent,

facere

:

;

magnumque Romanae

origini

decs adfuisse et non defuturam virtutem

et

proinde

;

ne gravarentur homines cum hominibus sanguinem 5

Nusquam benigne legatio audita adeo simul spernebant, simul tantam in medio crescentem molem sibi ac posteris suis metuebant.

ac genus miscere. est

A 6

-

:

quoque asylum aperuissent Aegre par conubium fore. et baud dubie ad vim

id

;

Romana pubes

id

parat Indici

Neptuno deinde

finitimis

turn

celebrant, ut 8

9

urbis,

aut

iubet,

poterant,

quancon-

facerent.

convenere, studio etiam videndae

maxime proximi

Crustumini, Antemnates 1

;

spectaculum

sciebant

industria

Consualia vocat.

rem claram exspectatamque

Multi mortales

novae

ex

ludos

equestri sollemnis

toque apparatu

passa,

Cui spectare res coepit. ut daret Romulus, aegri-

tempus locumque aptum tudinem animi dissimulans

7

ecquod feminis enim demum con-

dimissi,

plerisque rogitantibus

quas Aldus 3

:

;

quique, Caeninenses, 8

etiam

qua n

etiam Scheibe

a :

iam

Sabinorum omnis

A

5-

:

ac

Ci.

n.

1 The Consualia was a harvest festival, held on August 21. " to store Consus, the true name of the god, is from condert,, up." From the association of the festival with horses came

34

BOOK an

alliance

and

the

I.

ix.

2-9

privilege

of intermarrying.

they argued, as well as all other things, take their rise from the lowliest beginnings. As time goes on, those which are aided by their own worth and by the favour of Heaven achieve great power and renown. They said they were well assured that Rome's origin had been blessed with the favour of Heaven, and that worth would not be lacking their neighbours should not be reluctant to mingle their stock and their blood with the Romans, who were as truly men as they were. Nowhere did the In fact men embassy obtain a friendly hearing. spurned, at the same time that they feared, both for themselves and their descendants, that great power which was then growing up in their midst and the envoys were frequently asked, on being dismissed, if Cities,

;

;

they had opened a sanctuary for women as well as for men, for in that way only would they obtain suitable wives. This was a bitter insult to the young Romans, and the matter seemed certain to end in violence. Expressly to afford a fitting time and place for this, Romulus, concealing his resentment, made ready solemn games in honour of the equestrian 1 He then bade Neptune, which he called Consualia. proclaim the spectacle to the surrounding peoples, and his subjects prepared to celebrate it with all the resources within their knowledge and power, that they might cause the occasion to be noised abroad and

eagerly expected. Many people for they were also eager to see the new city gathered for the festival, especially those who lived nearest, the inhabitants of

Caenina, Crustumium, and Antemnae.

The

Sabines,

the later identification of the god with Neptunus Equester. See Fowler, Fest. pp. 206-9.

35

B.C.

753 ~ 717

LIVY multitude

A.U.C.

cum

liberis

1-37

hospitaliter per

10

Invitati

quentem tectis rem Romanam crevisse.

Ubi spectaculi tempus venit oculis erant, turn ex comsignoque dato iuventus Romana ad

deditaeque eo mentes posite orta 11

ac coniugibus venit.

domos cum situm moeniaque et freurbem vidissent, mirantur tarn brevi

vis,

cum

rapiendas virgines discurrit.

quern quaeque

pars forte, in quasdam forma ex-

Magna

inciderat, raptae

:

primoribus patrum destinatas ex plebe homines, quibus datum negotium erat, domos deferebant: unam longe ante alias specie ac pulchritudine

cellentes

12

insignem a globo Thalassii cuiusdam raptam ferunt, multisque sciscitantibus cuinam earn ferrent, identi-

dem, ne quis 13

U

violaret, Thalassio

ferri

clamitatum

;

inde nuptial em hanc vocem factam. Turbato per metum ludicro maesti parentes virginum profugiunt, incusantes violati hospitii scelus 1 deumque invocantes, cuius ad sollemne ludosque per fas ac fidem decepti venissent. Nee raptis aut spes de se melior

aut indignatio est minor. Sed ipse Romulus circumibat docebatque patrum id superbia factum, qui conu-

bium

negassent illas tamen in matrimonio, fortunarum omnium civitatisque, et quo

finitimis

in societate 15 nihil carius

;

humano generi 1

scelus

Grunaver

sit, :

liberum fore; molli-

foedus

fi.

Plutarch, Rom. 15, also gives the story, and observes " Talasius " as the Greeks did the Romans used " also See Catullus, Ixi. 134. Hymenaeus." 1

that

36

BOOK

I.

ix.

9-15

too, came with all their people, including their children and wives. They were hospitably entertained in every house, and when they had looked at the site of the City, its walls, and its numerous buildings, they marvelled that Rome had so rapidly

When the time came for the show, great. and people's thoughts and eyes were busy with it, grown

the preconcerted attack began. At a given signal the young Romans darted this way and that, to seize and carry off the maidens. In most cases these were taken by the men in whose path they chanced to be. Some, of exceptional beauty, had been marked out for the chief senators, and were carried off to their houses by plebeians to whom the office had been entrusted. One, who far excelled the rest in mien and loveliness, was seized, the story relates, by the gang of a certain Thalassius. Being repeatedly asked

whom they were bearing her off, they kept shouting that no one should touch her, for they were taking her to Thalassius, and this was the origin of the wedding-cry. 1 The sports broke up in a panic, and the parents of the maidens fled sorrowing. They charged the Romans with the crime of violating hospitality, and invoked the gods to whose solemn games they had come, deceived in violation of reThe stolen maidens were no ligion and honour. more hopeful of their plight, nor less indignant. But Romulus himself went amongst them and explained that the pride of their parents had caused this deed, when they had refused their neighbours the right to intermarry ; nevertheless the daughters should be wedded and become co-partners in all the possessions of the Romans, in their citizenship and, dearest privilege of all to the human race, in their children ; for

37

B.C.

753 ~ 71

'

LIVY rent

A.U.C.

modo

iras

137

darent animos.

1

quibus fors corpora dedisset, Saepe ex iniuria postmodum gratiam et,

ortam, eoque melioribus usuras

pro se quisque

viris,

quod adnisurus

cum suam vicem

sit ut,

functus

officio

parentium etiam patriaeque expleat desiderium. 16 Accedebant blanditiae virorum factum purgantium cupiditate atque amore, quae maxime ad muliebre sit,

efficaces preces sunt.

ingenium X. lam

admodum

mitigati animi raptis erant

raptarum parentes turn maxime sordida veste

;

at

lacri-

misque et querellis civitates concitabant. Nee domi tantum indignationes continebant, sed congregaban-

Tatium regem Sabinorum, et lega-

tur undique ad T. tiones eo, 2

quod maximum

nebat.

Lente agere

se tres ipsi inter 3

nomen

in

iis

regioni-

his Tatius Sabinique visi sunt

:

populi communiter bellum parant.

Ne Crustumini quidem atque Antemnates pro ardore iraque Caeninensium satis se impigre moveiit ; ita nomen Caeninum

per se ipsum 4

Tatii

Caeninenses Crustuminique bus erat, conveniebant. et Antemnates erant ad quos eius iniuriae pars perti-

impetum

facit.

Sed

in

agrum Romanum

effuse vastantibus

fit

obvius

cum

Romulus levique certamine docet vanam Exercitum fundit fugatque, viribus iram esse.

exercitu sine

fusum persequitur 1

38

:

in proelio obtruncat et

regem

dedisset

UOD

a :

dedissent

ft.

BOOK

I.

ix.

i5-x. 4

only let them moderate their anger, and give their hearts to those to whom fortune had given their A sense of injury had often given place to persons. affection, and they would find their husbands the kinder for this reason, that every man would earnestly endeavour not only to be a good husband, but also to console his wife for the home and parents she had His arguments were seconded by the wooing lost. of the men, who excused their act on the score of passion and love, the most moving of all pleas to a

woman's X.

heart.

The resentment of the

much diminished

at the very

brides

was already

moment when

their

mourning garb and with tears and lamentations, were attempting to arouse their states Nor did they confine their complaints to action. parents, in

home towns, but thronged from every side the house of Titus Tatius, king of the Sabines and thither, too, came official embassies, for the name The of Tatius was the greatest in all that country. to their to

;

men

of Caenina, Crustumium, and Antemnae, were who had had a share in the wrong. It seemed to them that Tatius and the Sabines were procrastinating, and without waiting for them these three But even the tribes arranged for a joint campaign. Crustuminians and Antemnates moved too slowly to satisfy the burning anger of the Caeninenses, and accordingly that nation invaded alone the Roman territory. But while they were dispersed and engaged

those

pillage, Romulus appeared with his troops and taught them, by an easy victory, how ineffectual is anger without strength. Their army he broke and

in

routed, and pursued

it

as

it fled

;

their king

he killed

39

^

B.C.

LIVY A.U.C.

spoliat

duce hostium occiso urbeni primo impetu

;

1-37

5 capit. vir

Inde exercitu victore reducto,

ipse,

magnificus turn factor um cstentator

cum factis

haud minor,

hostium caesi suspensa fabricate ad

spolia duels

id

apte ferculo gerens in Capitolium escendit ibique ea

cum ad quercum pastoribus sacram deposuisset, simul cum dono designavit templo lovis finis cognomenque "

6 addidit deo.

luppiter Feretri

" inquit,

" haec

tibi

Romulus rex regia arma fero, tempi unique his regionibus quas modo animo metatus sum dedico victor

sedem opimis tium caesis 7

Haec templi sacratum

quae regibus ducibusque hosauctorem sequentes postcrt ferent."

spoliis,

me

est origo Ita

est.

conditoris templi

quod primum omnium Romae

deinde

vocem

diis

esse

visum, nee inritam

qua laturos eo spolia

posteros nuncupavit, nee multitudine conpotum eius Bina postea inter tot annos, doni volgari laudem. tot bella,

opima parta sunt

fortuna decoris

XI.

Dum

ea

spolia

;

adeo rara eius

fuit.

ibi

Romani gerunt, Antemnatium

exereitus per occasionem ac solitudinem hostiliter in fines 1

Romanos incursionem

faeit.

Raptim et ad

Jupiter Feretrius (etymology unknown) was the pure

Italian Jupiter,

whose worship was

later

overshadowed by

See the Etruscan god of the great temple on the Capitol. Fowler, Fest. p. 229. 2 The other instances were the victories of Cossus over Tolumnius, king of Veii (iv. 20), and of Marcellus over

40

BOOK

I.

x.

4-xi.

i

and despoiled their city, once their leader he captured at the first assault. He then led his victorious army back, and being not more splendid in his deeds than willing to display them, he arranged the spoils of the enemy's dead commander upon a frame, suitably fashioned for the purthe Capitol. pose, and, carrying it himself, mounted Having there deposited his burden, by an oak which the shepherds held sacred, at the same time as he made his offering he marked out the limits of a temple to Jupiter, and bestowed a title upon him. "Jupiter Feretrius," he said, "to thee I, victorious

in battle

was

;

slain,

Romulus, myself a king, bring the panoply of a king, and dedicate a sacred precinct within the bounds which I have even now marked off in my mind, to be a seat for the spoils of honour which men shall bear hither in time to come, following my example, when they have slain kings and commanders of the enemy." This was the origin of the first temple that was consecrated in Rome. 1 It pleased Heaven, in the sequel, that while the founder's words should not be in vain, when he declared that men should bring spoils thither in the after time, yet the glory of that gift should not be staled by a multitude of partakers. Twice only since then, in all these years with their many so rarely wars, have the spoils of honour been won have men had the good fortune to attain to that ;

distinction. 2

XI. While the Romans were thus occupied in the army of the Antemnates seized the opportunity afforded by their absence, and made an inroad upon their territory but so swiftly was the Roman City, the

;

Virdomarus, king of the Insubrian Gauls. the three stories in

Propertius

tells

iv. 10.

41

B.C.

LIVY

rt

r,

.

.o

,

Romana

hos

A.D.C.

legr

..

.

)

.

2 busi igitur

ducta palatos in agris oppressit.

impetu et clamore hostes

prime

plicique victoria

j

i

dum captum

;

oppi-

ovantem Romulum

duf

;

-itr raptarum fatigata orat ut t Hersiha comunx precibus .., det veniam et in civitatem acci-

parentibus earum .. alescere concordia posse. Facile ita rem co piat de contra Crustuminos profectus T 3 impetratum. ln> $. Ibi minus etiam. quod alienis bellum mrerente! nt animi. certaminis fuit. ,., .j Utroque 4 cladibus ceciderai plures inventi qui propter uberl colomae missae ;

.

,

f.

,

,

.

.

;

tatem terrae .

Romam

juenter migratum 1

/.

3

inde

irec

.quis

.

est, a

Et

parentibus

raptarum.

ac propin * Sabinis bellum ortum. multoque XT Novissimum aTp nihil enim per iram aut cupidi.. maximum f

maxime

.

.

5 id

;

fuit

nee ostenderunt bellum prius quam est, silio etiam additus dolus. -, Sp. Tar-

tatem actum 6

Crustuminum nomina darent.

in

mtulerunt. Con raeerat arci. Huius filiam virffinem peius Romanae p .. rr'atius ut armatos in arcem accipiat auro corrumpit 1 turn sacris extra moenia petitum c aquam forte ea Dbrutam armis necavere. seu ut vi .. A (

;

7 lerat.

Accepti


-1 ?

LIVY victo malis muliebri pavore, ausae se inter tela vo-

A.U.C.

lantia inferre, ex transverse

dirimere

2 infestas acies,

orantes ne se sanguine

iras,

impetu facto dirimere hinc patres hinc viros

nefando

soceri

generique

respergerent, ne parricidio macularent partus suos, " Si adfinitatis 3 nepotum illi, hi liberum progeniem. inter vos,

causa

si

belli,

;

sumus melius peribimus quam sine alteris vestrum viduae aut orbae vivemus." Movet 1 res cum

tibus 4

conubii piget, in nos vertite iras nos viris ac paren-

nos volnerum ac caedium ;

multitudinem turn duces silentium et repentina fit inde ad foedus faciendum duces prodeunt quies ;

;

5

;

nee pacem modo, sed civitatem unam ex duabus faciunt. Regnum consociant imperium omiie con:

ferunt

Romam.

Ita

geminata urbe, ut Sabinis tamen

aliquid daretur, Quirites a Curibus appellati. Monumentum eius pugnae, ubi primum ex profunda emer-

Curtium in vado

sus palude equus

statuit,

Curtium

lacum appellarunt.

Ex

6

bello

Sabinas 1

viris

tarn

tristi

laeta repente

mouet J/V

:

mouit

F

:

in cues

L

pax cariores

omnes Romulo

ac parentibus et ante :

mouent

il.

1 Quirites probably comes not from Cures, nor (as Varro but thought) from the Sabine word guiris (curis), "spear," " wardsfrom curia (cf. next section) ; it would then mean

men." 2 For another explanation

of the name see vii. 6. Varro, L. L. v. 14 ff., assigns this version of the story to Piso, a on the third, the other to Prociliua, adding authority of Cornelius and Lutatius, to the effect that the Lacua

48

BOOK

I.

xin. 1-6

garments, their woman's timidity lost in a sense of their misfortune, dared to go amongst the flying missiles, and rushing in from the side, to part the hostile forces and disarm them of their anger, be-

seeching their fathers on this side, on that their husbands, that fathers-in-law and sons-in-law should not stain themselves with impious bloodshed, nor pollute with parricide the suppliants' children, grandsons to one party and sons to the other. " If you regret,"

they continued, "the relationship that unites you, if you regret the marriage-tie, turn your anger we are the cause of war, the cause of against us wounds, and even death to both our husbands and our It will be better for us to perish than to parents. ;

lacking either of you, as widows or as orphans." plea, not only to the rank and file, A stillness fell on but to their leaders as well. them, and a sudden hush. Then the leaders came forward to make a truce, and not only did they agree on peace, but they made one people out of the two. They shared the sovereignty, but all authority was In this way the population transferred to Rome. was doubled, and that some concession might after all be granted the Sabines, the citizens were named 1 As a reminder Quirites, from the town of Cures. of this battle they gave the name of Curtian Lake to the pool where the horse of Curtius first emerged from the deep swamp and brought his rider to live,

It

was a touching

2

safety.

The sudden exchange

of so

unhappy a war

joyful peace endeared the Sabine to their husbands and parents,

for a

women even more and above

all

to

Curtius was a place which had been struck by lightning in the consulship of a Curtius.

49

B.C.

753~ 717

LIVY Itaque cum populum in curias triginta nomina earum curiis inposuit. Id non traditur, cum baud dubie aliquanto numerus maior hoc mulierum fuerit, aetate an dignitatibus suis virorumve an sorte lectae sint quae nomina curiis ipsi fecit.

A.U.C.

7 divideret,

Eodem tempore

8 darent.

et centuriae tres

equitum

Ramnenses ab Roniulo, ab T. conscriptae sunt. Tatio Titienses appellati, Lucerum nominis et origiInde non modo commune, sed regnum duobus regibus fuit. XIV. Post aliquot annos propinqui regis Tatii legatos Laurentium pulsant, cumque Laurentes iure nis causa incerta est.

concors etiam

gentium agerent, apud Tatium gratia suorum et 2

Igitur illorum

preces plus poterant. vertit

;

nam

3 venisset,

Lavinii,

cum ad sollemne

concursu facto

interficitur.

erat tulisse

aegre quam dignum seu ob infidam societatem iniuria

caesum credebat.

poenam

in se

sacrificium eo

Earn rem minus

Romulum

ferunt,

regni, seu quia baud Itaque bello quidem absti-

ut tamen expiarentur legatorum iniuriae regisque caedes, foedus inter Romam Laviniumque urbes

nuit

4

;

renovatum est. Et cum his quidem insperata pax erat aliud multo bellum ortum. propius atque in ipsis prope portis :

Fidenates nimis vicinas prope se convalescere opes 1 The curia was a political unit the members of which had certain religious rites in common. 2 All three names are obscure, but it is not improbable that they represent a Roman, a Sabine, and an Etruscan element in the population.

5

BOOK Romulus

I.

And

xin. 6-xiv. 4

when he divided the named these wards after Undoubtedly the number of the women

himself.

so.

people into thirty curiae, he the women. 1

was somewhat greater than this, but tradition does not tell whether it was their age, their own or their husbands' rank, or the casting of lots, that determined which of them should give their names to At the same time there were formed the wards. the Ramnenses were three centuries of knights named after Romulus the Titienses after Titus the name and origin of the Luceres are Tatius From this time forth the two kings alike obscure. 2 ruled not only jointly but in harmony. _ XIV. Some years later the kinsmen of King Tatius maltreated the envoys of the Laurentians, and when their fellow-citizens sought redress under the law of nations, Titus yielded to his partiality for his relaIn consequence of tions and to their entreaties. :

;

;

he drew down their punishment upon himself, Lavinium, whither he had gone to the annual This sacrifice, a mob came together and killed him. act is said to have awakened less resentment than was proper in Romulus, whether owing to the disloyalty that attends a divided rule, or because he He thought Tatius had been not unjustly slain. therefore declined to go to war but yet, in order that he might atone for the insults to the envoys and the murder of the king, he caused the covenant between Rome and Lavinium to be renewed. Thus with the Laurentians peace was preserved against all expectation but another war broke out, much nearer, and indeed almost at the city gates. this

for at

;

;

The men

of Fidenae, perceiving the growth of a power which they thought too near themselves for

5*

B c 753-717 -

-

LIVY A.U.C.

rati,

priusquam tantuni roboris esset quantum futu-

rum

luventute apparebat, occupant bellum facere. armata immissa vastatur agri quod inter urbem ac 5

Fidenas

Inde ad laevam

est.

cum magna

Tiberis arcebat,

populantur 6 inlatus pro

;

versi,

quia dextra

trepidatione agrestium

tumultusque repens ex agris in urbem nuntio

fuit.

Excitus Romulus

neque

enim dilationem

pati tarn vicinum bellum poterat exercitum educit, castra a Fidenis mille passuum Ibi modico praesidio relicto egressus omnibus * partem militum locis circa densa virgulta obscuris subsidere in insidiis iussit cum parte maiore atque omni equitatu profectus, id quod quaerebat, tumultuoso et minaci genere pugnae, adequitando Fugae quoque, ipsis prope portis hostem excivit. quae simulanda erat, eadem equestris pugna causam minus mirabilem dedit. Et cum, velut inter pugnae

7 locat.

copiis

;

8

fugaeque consilium trepidante equitatu, pedes quoque gradum, plenis repente portis effusi hostes impulsa Romana acie studio instandi sequendique Inde subito exorti 9 trahuntur ad locum insidiarum. Romani transversam invadunt hostium aciem addunt referret

;

pavorem mota e relicti

fuerant

;

castris signa eorum qui in praesidio ita multiplici terrore perculsi Fide-

nates prius paene quam Romulus quique avehi cum eo visi erant 2 circumagerent frenis equos, terga ver1 densa uirgulta H. J. Mueller obsita uirgulta Conway densa obsita uirgulta fl. 2 quique auehi cum eo uisi erant Walters quique cum eo :

:

:

uisi erant (quisierant

P

:

:

52

UOEHPFB

equis ierant P*FB) equis abierant usi (uisi erant

quique cum eo quique cum MDL quique cum eo equites

:

DL]

BOOK

I.

xiv.

4-9

safety, did not wait till its promised strength should be realized, but began war themselves. Arming the

young men, they sent them to ravage the land between the City and Fidenae. Thence they turned for the Tiber stopped them on the right and by their devastations struck terror into the farmers, whose sudden stampede from the fields into Romulus the City brought the first tidings of war. led forth his army on the instant, for delay was impossible with the enemy so near, and pitched his camp a mile from Fidenae. Leaving there a small A part guard, he marched out with all his forces. of his men he ordered to lie in ambush, on this side and on that, where thick underbrush afforded cover advancing with the greater part of the infantry and all the cavalry, and delivering a disorderly and provoking attack, in which the horsemen galloped almost up to the gates, he accomplished his purpose of drawing out the enemy. For the flight, too, which had next to be feigned, the cavalry engagement

to the left

;

And when not only afforded a favourable pretext. the cavalry began to waver, as if undecided whether to fight or run, but the infantry also fell back, the were quickly thronged by the enemy, who poured out and hurled themselves against the Roman line, and in the ardour of attack and pursuit were drawn on to the place of ambuscade. There the city gates

Romans suddenly sprang out and

assailed the enemy's add to their terror, the standards of the detachment which had been left on guard were seen advancing from the camp thus threatened by so many dangers the men of Fidenae scarcely afforded time for Romulus and those whom they had seen riding off with him to wheel about, before they flanks, while, to

;

53

B 76 ,f; 17

LIVY A.P.C

137

10 tunt;

11

multoque

effusius, qtiippe vera fuga, qui

simu-

lantes paulo ante secuti erant,

oppidum repetebant.

Non tamen

haerens

eripuere se hosti

manus, priusquam

fores

:

in

tergo Ro-

portarum obicerentur, velut

agmine uno inrumpit.

XV.

Belli Fidenatis contagione inritati

animi et consanguinitate Etrusci fuertmt

et

Fidenates quoque

quod ipsa propinquitas

Romana arma omnibus

loci,

si

infesta finitimis essent, stimu-

Romanos excucurrerunt populabundi Itaque non castris magis quam iusti more belli. hostium exercitu non exspectato raptam ex positis,

labat.

2

nam

Veientium

agris

In fines

praedam portantes Veios

contra, postquam hostem

rediere.

non

in agris

Romanus

invenit, dimi-

cationi ultimae instructus intentusque Tiberim tran3

Quern postquam castra ponere et ad urbem accessurum Veientes audivere, obviam egressi, ut sit.

potius acie decernerent 4

quam

inclusi

de

tectis

moeni-

l

busque dimicarent. Ibi viribus nulla arte adiutis tantum veterani robore exercitus rex Romanus vicit, persecutusque fusos ad moenia hostes urbe valida

muris ac situ ipso munita abstinuit: agros rediens 1

54

arte F*f Petrus

Nannius

:

parte

fl.

BOOK

I.

xiv.

9-xv. 4

broke and ran, and in far greater disorder than that of the pretended fugitives whom they had just been chasing for the flight was a real one this time sought to regain the town. But the Fidenates did the Romans followed close not escape their foes upon their heels, and before the gates could be shut burst into the city, as though they both formed but ;

a single army.

XV. From Fidenae the war-spirit, by a kind of contagion, spread to the Veientes, whose hostility was aroused by their kinship with the Fidenates, Etruscans like themselves, and was intensified by the danger which lay in their very proximity to Rome, if her arms should be directed against all her neighbours. They made an incursion into Roman territory which more resembled a marauding expedition than and so, without having ena regular campaign trenched a camp or waited for the enemy's army, they carried off their booty from the fields and brought it back to Veii. The Romans, on the contheir enemy in the fields, crossed trary, not finding the Tiber, ready and eager for a decisive struggle. When the Veientes heard that they were making a camp, and would be advancing against their city, ;

they went out to meet them, preferring to settle the quarrel in the field of battle rather than to be shut up and compelled to fight for their homes and Without employing strategy to aid his their town. forces, the Roman king won the battle by the sheer and routing his enestrength of his seasoned army, But the city was mies, pursued them to their walls. the protection afforded by strongly fortified, besides Their its site, and he refrained from attacking it. waste as he returned, more in fields, indeed, he laid 55

B.C. "

r53 ~ 717

LIVY A.U.C. 1

n *T

6 vastat, ulciscendi

magis quam praedae studio. Eaque

clade baud minus

quam

adversa pugna subacti Vei-

pacem petitum oratores Romam mittunt. in centum annos indutiae datae. multatis parte entes

6

Agri

Haec ferme Romulo regnante domi militiaeque quorum nihil absonum fidei divinae originis divinitatisque post mortem creditae fuit, non animus

gesta,

regno avito reciperando, non condendae urbis non bello ac pace firmandae. Ab illo

in

7 consilium,

enim profecto 8

viribus datis

valuit ut in quad-

acceptissimus militum animis trecentosque armatos ad custodiam corporis, quos Celeres appellavit, non in bello solum sed etiam in pace babuit. XVI. His inmortalibus editis operibus cum ad exercitum recensendum contionem in campo ad

alios

A.U.O.

tantum

raginta deinde annos tutam pacem baberet. Multitudini tamen gratior fuit quam patribus, longe ante ;

Caprae paludem haberet, subito coorta tempestas fragore tonitribusque tam denso regem

cum magno

nimbo ut conspectum eius contioni abstuRomana nee deinde in terris Romulus fuit. ex tam turtandem sedato pavore, postquam pubes

operuit 2 lerit

;

bido die serena et tranquilla lux rediit, ubi vacuam vidit, etsi satis credebat patribus, qui

sedem regiam

1

2 ii. ii.

Literally,

"the Swift."

cf. Cic. de Rep. ii. 17 ; Dion. Hal. 56 Plut. Rom. xxvii. Ovid also tells the story in Fasti, 491 ff., and Met. xiv. 806 ff.

56

For the deification ;

BOOK

I.

xv. 4-xvi. 2

for booty, and this disaster, following upon their defeat, induced the Veientes to send envoys to Rome and sue for peace. They were deprived of a part of their land, and a truce was granted them for a hundred years. Such were the principal achievements of the reign of Romulus, at home and in the field, nor is any of them incompatible with the belief in his divine origin and the divinity which was ascribed to the king after his death, whether one considers his spirit in recovering the kingdom of his ancestors, or his wisdom in founding the City and in strengthening it by warlike and peaceful measures. For it was to him, assuredly, that Rome owed the vigour which enabled her to enjoy an untroubled peace for the next forty years. Nevertheless, he was more liked

revenge than from a desire

by the commons than by the senate, and was preeminently dear to the hearts of his soldiers. Of these he had three hundred for a bodyguard, to whom he gave the name of Celeres, 1 and kept them by him, not only in war, but also in time of peace. XVI. When these deathless deeds had been done, as the king was holding a muster in the Campus Martius, near the swamp of Capra, for the purpose of reviewing the army, suddenly a storm came up, with loud claps of thunder, and enveloped him in a cloud so thick as to hide him from the sight of the assembly and from that moment Romulus was no ;

The Roman soldiers at length recovered from their panic, when this hour of wild confusion had been succeeded by a sunny calm but when they saw that the royal seat was empty, although they readily believed the assertion of the senators, who had been standing next to Romulus,

more on

earth. 2

;

57

B.C.

75i

B.O. 716

LIVY proximi steterant, sublimem raptum procella, tamen

A.U.C.

metu icta maestum aliquamdiu silenDeinde a paucis initio facto deum deo natum, regem parentemque urbis Romanae salvere universi Romulum iubent pacem precibus exposcunt, uti volens propitius suam semper sospitet velut orbitatis

3

tium obtinuit.

;

4

Fuisse credo turn quoque aliquos qui

progeniem.

discerptum regem patrum manibus taciti arguerent manavit enim haec quoque sed perobscura fama

;

;

illam alteram admiratio viri et pavor praesens nobili5 tavit. Et consilio etiam unius hominis addita rei dicitur fides.

Namque

Proculus lulius, sollicita

civi-

tate desiderio regis et infensa patribus, gravis, ut traditur, quamvis magnae rei auctor, in contionem

"Romulus"

6 prodit.

inquit, "Quirites, parens urbis hodierna luce caelo repente delapsus se huius, prima mihi obvium dedit. Cum perfusus horrore venera-

bundus 7 tueri

l

adstitissem, petens precibus ut contra in'

fas

esset,

caelestes ita velle

rarum

sit

;

(

Romanis Abi, nuntia/ inquit ut mea Roma caput orbis ter-

proinde rem militarem colant, sciantque

et ita posteris tradant nullas opes humanas armis Romanis resistere posse.' Haec," inquit, " locutus 8 sublimis abiit." Mirum quantum illi viro nuntianti haec fides fuerit, 1

1

58

quamque desiderium Romuli

uenerabundus M$-

The Romans

:

uenerabunilusque

fi.

regularly prayed with the head cloaked.

BOOK

xvi.

I.

2-8

that he had been caught up on high in the blast, they nevertheless remained for some time sorrowful and silent, as if filled with the fear of orphanhood. Then, when a few men had taken the initiative, they all with one accord hailed Romulus as a god and a god's son, the King and Father of the Roman City, and with prayers besought his favour that he would graciously be pleased forever to protect his children. I believe, even then who secretly asserted that the king had been rent in pieces by the hands of the senators, for this rumour, too, got abroad, but in very obscure terms the other version

There were some,

;

obtained currency, owing to men's admiration for the And the hero and the intensity of their panic. shrewd device of one man is also said to have gained new credit for the story. This was Proculus Julius, who, when the people were distracted with the loss of their king and in no friendly mood towards the senate, being, as tradition tells, weighty in council, were the matter never so important, addressed the

" Quirites, the Father of this assembly as follows descended Romulus, suddenly from the sky at City, dawn this morning and appeared to me. Covered with confusion, I stood reverently before him, praying that it might be vouchsafed me to look upon his face without sin. 1 'Go,' said he, 'and declare to the Romans the will of Heaven that my Rome shall be the capital of the world so let them cherish the art of war, and let them know and teach their children that no human strength can resist Roman So saying," he concluded, "Romulus dearms.' It is wonderful what credence parted on high." the people placed in that man's tale, and how the grief for the loss of Romulus, which the plebeians :

;

59

B.O. 716

LIVY facta fide inmortalitatis

apud plebem exercitumque

.U.C.

38

lenitum

sit.

XVII. Patrum interim animos certamen regni ac Necdum ad singulos, 1 quia nemo

cupido versabat.

magnopere eminebat 2 factionibus

inter

in

ordines

novo populo, pervenerat Oriundi ab certabatur.

Sabinis, ne, quia post Tati

:

mortem ab sua

parte non

erat regnatum, in societate aequa possessionem im-

regem volebant Romani veteres peregrinum regem aspernabantur. In variis voluntatibus regnari 2 tamen omnes volebant

perii amitterent, sui corporis creari

3

4 libertatis dulcedine

nondum

experta.

;

Timor deinde

ne civitatem sine imperio, exercitum sine duce multarum circa civitatium inritatis animis patres incessit,

vis aliqua

Et esse

externa adoriretur.

caput placebat, et 5 inducebat.

Ita

nemo

rem

igitur aliquod

concedere in animum

alteri

centum

inter se

patres,

decem

decuriis factis singulisque in singulas decurias creatis

qui

summae rerum

praeessent, consociant.

Decem

imperitabant unus cum insignibus imperii et lictoribus erat quinque dierum spatio finiebatur imperium :

6

;

ac per

regni 7

omnes

in

orbem

ibat

;

annuumque intervallum

Id ab re, quod nunc quoque tenet nomen,

fuit.

interregnum appellatum.

Fremere

deinde

plebs

multiplicatam servitutem, centum pro uno dominos 1

2

60

ad singulos Qraevius regnari

$-

:

regnare

:

fl.

a singulis A.

BOOK and the army

felt,

I.

xvi.

8-xvn.

7

was quieted by the assurance of

his immortality.

XVII. The senators meanwhile were engaged in a So far it had not struggle for the coveted kingship. come to a question of any one person, for nobody stood out with special prominence in the new nation ; instead, a strife of factions was waging between the two stocks. Those of Sabine origin, having had no king on their side since the death of Tatius, feared that despite their equal rights they might lose their hold upon the sovereign power, and hence desired that the king should be chosen from their own body. The original Romans spurned the idea of an alien Various, however, as were men's inclinations, king. to be ruled by a king was their universal wish, for they had not yet tasted the sweetness of liberty. Then the senators became alarmed, lest the state wanting a ruler and the army a leader, and many

neighbouring states being disaffected, some violence might be offered from without. All therefore were agreed that there should be some head, but nobody

could make up his mind to yield to his fellow. And so the hundred senators shared the power among themselves, establishing ten decuries and appointing one man for each decury to preside over the adTen men exercised authority only ministration. one had its insignia and lictors. Five days was the period of his power, which passed in rotation to all and for a year the monarchy lapsed. This interval was called, as it was, an interregnum, a name which even yet obtains. Murmurs then arose among the plebs that their servitude had been multiplied that a hundred masters had been given them instead of ;

;

;

61 VOL.

i.

D

B.C.

716

LIVY factos

4.0.0.

;

nee ultra

nisi

88

8

bantur passuri. offerendum ultro

summa

ineunt 9 plus

darent

rati

sensissent ea

quod amissuri

creatum vide-

moved

patres,

erant, ita gratiam

populo permissa ut non Decreverunt

potestate

iuris

et ab ipsis

regem

Cum

retinerent. 1

quam

enim ut cum populus regem

iussisset, id sic

ratum

2

Hodie quoque in 3 legibus magistratibusque rogandis usurpatur idem

esset, si patres auctores fierent.

ius vi

in

adempta priusquam populus suffragium ineat, incertum comitiorum eventum patres auctores ;

Turn interrex contiorie advocata, "Quod bo" " faustum Quirites, regem num, felixque sit inquit, Patres deinde, si ita patribus visum est. create

10 fiunt.

;

dignum 11

qui secundus ab Roinulo numeretur crearitis.

auctores fient."

Adeo

id

fuit ut,

gratum plebi

ne

modo sciscerent iubedecerneret qui Romae regnaret.

victi beneficio viderentur, id

rentque, ut senatus

XVI II. Inclita iustitia religioque ea tempestate Numae Pompili erat. Curibus Sabinis habitabat, vir, ut in ilia quisquam esse aetate omnis divini atque humani iuris. Auctorem

consultissimus 2 poterat,

doctrinae eius, quia non exstat alius, falso Servio

Pythagoram edunt, quern Romae_, centum amplius post annos, 1

retinerent Gronov.

2

sic ratum idem F3 g-

1

62

F D*^3

:

id

:

:

Tullio

regnante

in ultima Italiae

detinerent n.

si (sic

enim n.

Samium

U) gratum

fl.

BOOK

I.

xvn. 7-xvin. 2

No longer, it seemed, would they endure anything short of a king, and a king, too, of their own choosing. Perceiving that such ideas were in the wind, the senators thought it would be well to proffer spontaneously a thing which they were on the verge of losing, and obtained the favour of the people by granting them supreme power on such terms as to part with no greater prerogative than For they decreed that when the they retained. people should have named a king, their act should Even only be valid in case the senators ratified it. now, in voting for laws and magistrates, the same right is exercised, but is robbed of its significance before the people can begin to vote, and when the result of the election is undetermined, the Fathers On the present occasion the interrex sumratify it. moned the assembly and spoke as follows " May prosperity, favour, and fortune attend our action Such is the pleasure of Quirites, choose your king. the Fathers, who, in their turn, if your choice fall upon one worthy to be called Romulus' successor, will confirm your election." This so pleased the one.

;

:

!

outdone in generthey merely resolved and ordered that the senate should decree who should be king in Rome. XVIII. A great reputation for justice and piety was enjoyed in those days by Numa Pompilius. Cures, a town of the Sabines, was his home, and he was deeply versed, so far as anyone could be in that age, in all law, divine and human. The teacher to whom he owed his learning was not, as men say, in default of another name, the Samian Pythagoras plebs, that, unwilling to appear

osity,

;

for

it

is

well established that Servius

Tullius

was

king at Rome, more than a hundred years after this 63

B.C. 716

LIVY Metapontum Heracleamque et Crotona iuvenum aemulantium studia coetus habuisse con-

ora circa

A.U.C. OQ

Ex

3 stat.

quibus

locis, etsi

eiusdem

aetatis fuisset,

quae fama in Sabinos ? Aut quo linguae commercio quemquam ad cupiditatem discendi excivisset ? Quove praesidio unus per tot gentes dissonas sermone 4

moribusque pervenisset ? Suopte igitur ingenio temperatum animum virtutibus fuisse opinor magis instructumque non tarn peregrinis artibus qtiam distetrica ac tristi veterum Sabinornm, quo genere nullum quondam incorruptius fuit. Audito

ciplina 5

nomine Numae patres Romani, quamquam

inclinari

opes ad Sabinos rege inde sumpto videbantur, tarn en neque se quisquam nee factionis suae alium nee

denique patrum ant civium quemquam praeferre illi viro ausi ad unum omnes Numae Pompilio regnum 6

deferendum

decernunt.

Accitus,

sicut

Romulus

augurato urbe condenda regnum adeptus est, de se quoque deos consuli iussit. Inde ab augure, cui

deinde

honoris

sacerdotium 7

fuit,

ergo publicum id perpetuumque deductus in arcem in lapide T ad

meridiem versus consedit. capite velato

nodo aduncum 1

1

It

64

Augur ad laevam

eius

cepit, dextra manu baculum sine tenens, quern lituum appellarunt.

sedem

in lapide Kg-

was about 530

B.C.

:

in

lapidem (or lapidem) n.

when Pythagoras

settled in Croton.

BOOK

I.

xvin. 2-7

time, when Pythagoras gathered about him, on the farthest coasts of Italy, in the neighbourhood of Me-

tapontum, Heraclea, and Croton, young men eager And from that country, even to share his studies. 1 if he had been contemporary, how could his fame have reached the Sabines ? Again, in what common language could he have induced anyone to seek instruction of him? Or under whose protection could a solitary man have made his way through so many nations differing in speech and customs ? It was Numa's native disposition, then, as I incline to believe, that tempered his soul with noble qualities, and his training was not in foreign studies, but in the stern and austere discipline of the ancient Sabines, a race incorruptible as any race of the olden time. When Numa's name had been proposed, the Roman senators perceived that the Sabines would gain the ascendancy if a king were to be chosen from that nation yet nobody ventured to urge his own claims in preference to those of such a man, nor the claim of any other of his faction, nor those, in short, of any of the senators or citizens. And so they unanimously voted to offer the sovereignty to Numa Pompilius. Being summoned to Rome he commanded that, just as Romulus had obeyed the augural omens in building his city and assuming regal power, so too in his own case the gods should be consulted. Accordingly an augur (who thereafter, as a mark of honour, was made a priest of the state in permanent charge of that function) conducted him to the citadel and caused him to sit down on a stone, The augur seated himself on facing the south. Numa's left, having his head covered, and holding his in right hand the crooked staff without a knot ;

B.O. 716

LIVY Inde ubi prospectu in urbem agrumque capto deos precatus regiones ab oriente ad occasum determina-

A.U.O.

vit,

8

dextras ad meridiem partes, laevas ad septen-

trionem esse dixit

;

sign urn contra, quoad

animo

oculi ferebant,

conspectum in laevam mamim translate dextra 2 9 imposita ita precatus est,

Numam

hunc

regem Romae

1

origissime

finivit

;

turn lituo

in caput

Numae

"

luppiter pater, si est fas Pompilium, cuius ego caput teneo, esse, uti tu signa nobis certa adcla-

quos feci." Turn peregit verbis Quibus missis declaratus auspicia quae mitti vellet. rex Numa de templo descendit.

10 rassis inter eos fines

XIX. Qui regno

A.U.C.

tam

vi et

2 integro

ita potitus

urbem novam, condi-

armis, iure earn legibusque ac moribus de

Quibus cum inter bella ad-

condere parat.

suescere videret non posse, quippe efferari militia

animos, mitigandum ferocem populum armorum desuetudine ratus, lanum ad infimum Argiletum indicem pacis bellique fecit, apertus ut in armis esse

omnes populos signideinde post Numae regnum clausus semel T. Manlio consule post Punicum primum

civitatem, clausus pacatos circa 3 ficaret. fuit,

Bis

perfectum belluin, iterum, quod nostrae aetati di dederunt ut videremus, post bellum Actiacum ab imperatore

Caesare

terra

Augusto pace

PV

quo M. quoad Weissenborn quod n quo 2 ita precatus est Walters precatua est ita catus ita est 1

:

:

:

MPFUBEH.

66

marique

:

ORDL

:

pre-

BOOK

I.

xviii.

y-xix. 3

which they call a lituus. Then, looking out over the City and the country beyond, he prayed to the gods, and marked off the heavens by a line from east to west, designating as

'

'

right

B.O.

716

the regions to the south,

as 'left' those to the north, and fixing in his mind a landmark opposite to him and as far away as the eye

could reach next shifting the crook to his left hand and, laying his right hand on Numa's head, he " Father uttered the following prayer Jupiter, if it is Heaven's will that this man Numa Pompilius, whose head I am touching, be king in Rome, do thou exhibit to us unmistakable signs within those limits which I have set." He then specified the auspices which he desired should be sent, and upon their appearance Numa was declared king, and so descended i'rom the augural station. XIX. When he had thus obtained the kingship, he prepared to give the new City, founded by force of arms, a new foundation in law, statutes, and observAnd perceiving that men could not grow ances. used to these things in the midst of wars, since their natures grew wild and savage through warfare, he thought it needful that his warlike people should be softened by the disuse of arms, and built the temple of Janus at the bottom of the Argiletum, as an index of peace and war, that when open it might signify that the nation was in arms, when closed that all the Twice since peoples round about were pacified. Numa's reign has it been closed once in the consulship of Titus Manlius, after the conclusion of the the second time, which the gods First Punic War permitted our own generation to witness, was after the battle of Actium, when the emperor Caesar Augustus had brought about peace on land and ;

:

:

;

67

B.C.

LIVY A.U.C.

Clauso eo

4 parta.

cum omnium

circa

finitimorum

39-82

societate ac foederibus iunxisset animos, positis externorum periculorum curis ne luxuriarent otio animi,

quos metus hostium disciplinaque militaris continuerat, omnium primum, rem ad multitudinem imperi-

tam 5

et

saeculis

illis

metum iniciendum

rudem

rum cum descendere Qui

efficacissimam, de
-

:

eausam A.

BOOK

I.

xxv. 7-13

thinking that each of them would pursue him with what speed his wounds permitted. He had already run some little distance from the spot where they had fought, when,looking back, he saw that they were following at wide intervals and that one of them had nearly overtaken him. Facing about, he ran swiftly up to his man, and while the Alban host were calling out to the Curiatii to help their brother, Horatius had already slain him, and was hastening, flushed with victory, to meet his second antagonist. Then with a cheer, such as is often drawn from partisans by a sudden turn in a contest, the Romans fled,

encouraged their champion, and he pressed on to end the battle.

And

so,

before the third Curiatius could

come up

and he was not far off Horatius dispatched the second. They were now on even terms, one soldier surviving on each side, but in hope and vigour they were far from equal. The one, unscathed and elated by his double victory, was eager for a third

The other dragged himself along, faint from his wound and exhausted with running he thought how his brothers had been slaughtered before him, and was a beaten man when he faced his triumThe phant foe. What followed was no combat. Roman cried exultantly, " Two victims I have given to the shades of my brothers the third I will offer up to the cause of this war, that Roman may rule Alban." His adversary could barely hold up his shield. With a downward thrust Horatius buried his sword in the Alban's throat, and despoiled him where he lay. The Romans welcomed their hero with jubilations and thanksgivings, and their joy was all the greater that they had come near despairing. The burial of their dead then claimed the attention encounter.

;

:

89

B .c. 672 ~ 640

LIVY rum nequaquam

A.UC. 62-1 14

paribus animis vertuntur, quippe aucti, alter! dicionis alienae fact!.

alter!

imperio

quo quisque loco cecidit, duo RoAlbany tria Albana Romam

14 Sepulcra exstant,

mana uno

loco propius

versus, sed distantia locis, ut et

XXVI. Priusquam Mettio, ex

foedere

inde

est.

pugnatum

digrederentur,

roganti

quid imperaret, imperat Tullus uti iuventutem in armis habeat usurum se icto,

:

eorum opera,

bellum cum Veientibus

si

2 exercitus inde

domos

abducti.

foret.

Princeps

ibat trigemina spolia prae se gerens

;

Ita

Horatius

cui soror virgo,

quae desponsa uni ex Curiatiis fuerat, obvia ante fuit

portam Capenam tris

;

cognitoque super umeros

fra-

ipsa confecerat, solvit

paludamento sponsi, quod nomine sponsum mortuum appel-

crines et flebiliter 3 lat.

itaque 4

feroci iuveni animum conploratio sororis sua tantoque gaudio publico. Stricto verbis increpans trans figit gladio simul

Movet victoria

in

" Abi

puellam. '

sponsum

inquit,

hinc cum immature amore ad " oblita fratrum mortuorum vi-

5 vique, oblita patriae.

quaecumque Romana

Sic eat

lugebit hostem."

Atrox visum id facinus patribus plebique, sed

Tamen

recens meritum facto obstabat.

ad regem.

Rex, ne ipse

raptus in ius

tarn tristis ingratique ad

1 volgus iudicii ac secundum iudicium supplicii auctor 1

90

ac Rhenanus

F

9 :

ad n.

BOOK

I.

xxv. i3~xxvi. 5

with widely different feelings, of the two armies, since one nation was exalted with imperial power, the other made subject to a foreign sway. The graves

may still be seen where each soldier fell two Roman graves in one spot, nearer Alba those of the three Albans towards Rome, but separated, just as they had :

;

fought.

XXVI. Before they left the field Mettius asked, in pursuance of the compact, what Tullus commanded him to do, and the Roman ordered him to hold his young men under arms, saying that he should employ their services, if war broke out with the Veientes. The armies then marched home. In the van of the Romans came Horatius, displaying his triple spoils. As he drew near the Porta Capena he was met by his unwedded sister, who had been promised in marriage to one of the Curiatii. When she recognized on her brother's shoulders the military cloak of her betrothed, which she herself had woven, she loosed her hair and, weeping, called on her dead lover's name. It enraged the fiery youth to hear his sister's lamentations in the hour of his own victory and the nation's great rejoicing.

And so, drawing his sword and at the same time angrily upbraiding her, he ran her through the body. " Begone" he cried, "to your betrothed, with your ill-timed love, since you have forgot your brothers, both the dead and the living, and forgot your country " So perish every Roman woman who mourns a foe Horrid as this deed seemed to the Fathers and the people, his recent service was an off-set to it nevertheless he was seized and brought before the king for trial. The king, that he might not take upon himself the responsibility for so stern and unpopular a judgement, and for the punishment which must follow !

!

;

B .c. 672 - (J 40

LIVY A.U.C.

6

esset, concilio populi

advocate "Duumviros," inquit,

Horatio

iudicent,

"qui legem

perduellionem

Lex horrendi carminis

facio."

perduellionem iudicent

viri

carit,

provocatione certato

bito

infelici arbori reste

;

7 intra

pomerium

duumviri

creati.

vel

Qui

si

;

secundum duum-

erat

:

a duumviris provo-

vincent, caput obnususpendito verberato vel ;

extra

si

;

Hac

pomerium.

se absolvere

lege

non rebantur ea

lege ne innoxium quidem posse, cum condemnassent, turn alter ex iis 1 "P. Horati, tibi perduellionem " 2 Acces8 iudico," inquit ; i, lictor, colliga manus."

Turn Horatius serat lictor iniciebatque laqueum. " auctore Tullo, clemente legis interprete, Provoco," Itaque

inquit.

3

provocatione certatum ad populum

Moti homines sunt in eo iudicio maxime P. Horatio patre proclamante se filiam iure caesam

9 est.

iudicare

:

versurum

ni ita esset, patrio iure in filium fuisse.

Orabat deinde, ne

se,

*

animad-

quern paulo

egregia stirpe conspexissent, orbum liberis Inter haec senex iuvenem amplexus, spolia Curiatiorum fixa eo loco qui nunc pila Horatia appel-

ante

cum

10 facerent.

latur 1

2 3

ostentans,

iis

Madvig

:

"Huncine"

aiebat,

"quern modo

his H.

inquit i, lictor 5- Modiun: inqui itaque Tan. Faber ita de fl. :

i

lictor *

M:

filium

inquit lictor 5-

:

filiam

fl.

fl.

1 By taking it upon himself to punish his sister, Horatius had usurped a function of the state, and so was guilty of

treason. 2

I

have adopted the view of Oldfather (T.A.P.A. xxxix. ff.) that neither hanging nor crucifixion is meant, but

pp. 49

92

BOOK

I.

xxvi.

5-10

sentence, called together the council of the people " In accordance with the law I and said appoint :

duumvirs

to l

pass

judgement

upon

Horatius

for

The dread formula

of the law ran thus " Let the duumvirs pronounce him guilty of treason

treason."

:

;

from the duumvirs, let the appeal be tried if the duumvirs win, let the lictor veil his head let him bind him with a rope to a barren tree let him scourge him either within or without the 2 pomerium." By the terms of this law duumvirs were appointed. They considered that they might not acquit, under that act, even one who was innocent, and having given a verdict of guilty, one of them " pronounced the words, Publius Horatius, I adjudge you a traitor go, lictor, bind his hands." The lictor had approached and was about to fit the noose. Then if

he

shall appeal ;

;

;

;

Horatius, at the prompting of Tullus, who put a merciful construction upon the law, cried, " I appeal '' And so the appeal was tried before the people. What influenced men most of all in that trial was the assertion of Publius Horatius, the father, that his !

daughter had been justly slain otherwise he should have used a father's authority and have punished his He then implored them not to make son, himself. him childless whom they had beheld a little while before surrounded by a goodly offspring. So saying, the old man embraced the youth, and pointing to the spoils of the Curiatii set up in the place which is now called "the Horatian Spears," 3 he exclaimed, "This man you saw but lately advancing ;

that the culprit death.

was fastened to the tree and scourged

to

The name

of the place which commemorated the spoils reflects the tradition, rejected above by Livy, that the Horatii were Albans, the Curiatii Romans. 3

93 VOL.

I.

E

ua 672 6*0

LIVY si-iii

decoratum ovantemque Quirites,

eum

victoria

incedentem

vidistis,

sub furca vinctum inter verbera et

cruciatus videre potestis

Quod

?

vix

Albanorum

oculi

deforme spectaculum ferre possent. I, lictor, colliga manus, quae paulo ante armatae imperium populo Romano pepererunt. I, caput obnube libera-

11 tarn

huius

toris urbis

vel intra

arbore infelici suspende

;

pomerium, modo

inter

ilia

;

verbera

pila et

spolia

hostium, vel extra pomerium, modo inter sepulcra Curiatiorum. Quo enim ducere hunc iuvenem potestis,

non sua decora eum

ubi

12 supplicii

vindicent?"

lacrimas nee ipsius

Non

parem

in

tulit

a

tanta foeditate

populus nee patris

omni periculo animum,

absolveruntque admiratione magis virtutis quam iure causae. Itaque, ut caedes manifesto aliquo tamen piaculo lueretur, 13 pecunia publica.

imperatum patri ut filium expiaret Is quibusdam piacularibus sacri-

quae deinde genti Horatiae tradita sunt, transmisso per viam tigillo capite adoperto velut sub Id hodie quoque publice iugum misit iuvenem. ficiis factis,

semper refectum manet sororium tigillum vocant. sepulcrum, quo loco corruerat icta, con:

14 Horatiae

structum est saxo quadrate.

XXVII. Nee diu pax Albana

mansit.

Invidia

quod tribus militibus fortuna publica commissa 1 fuerit, vanum ingenium dictatoris corrupit, et^ quoniam recta consilia hand bene evenerant, pravis volgi,

1

94

fuerit

n

:

fuerat

HR

a :

foret

Madvig.

BOOK decked with

spoils

I.

xxvi.

lo-xxvn.

and triumphing

i

in his victory

;

can you bear, Quirites, to see him bound beneath a fork and scourged and tortured ? Hardly could Alban eyes endure so hideous a sight. Go, lictor, bind the hands which but now, with sword and shield, brought imperial power to the Roman People Go, veil the head of the liberator of this city Bind him to a barren tree Scourge him within the pomerium, if you will so it be amidst yonder spears and trophies of our enemies or outside the pomerium so it be amongst the graves of the Curiatii For whither can you lead this youth where his own honours will not vindicate him from so foul a punishment?" The people could not withstand the father's tears, or the courage of Horatius himself, steadfast in every and they acquitted him, more in admiration of peril his valour than from the justice of his cause. And so, that the flagrant murder might yet be cleansed away, by some kind of expiatory rite, the father was commanded to make atonement for his son at the public !

!

!

!

;

He therefore

offered certain piacular sacrifices, handed down in the Horatian family, and, erecting a beam across the street, to typify a yoke, he made his son pass under

cost.

which

were thenceforward

with covered head. It remains to this day, being restored from time to time at the state's expense, and

it,

is

of

known as " the Sister's Beam." Horatia's tomb, hewn stone, was built on the place where she had

been struck down. XXVII. But the peace with Alba did not

last

The discontent of the people, who criticized long. the dictator for having confided the nation's welfare to

three soldiers, broke

down

his

weak

character,

and since honest measures had proved unsuccessful, 95

B.C.

672 " e

LIVY A.U.C.

popularium animos coepit.

2 reconciliare

Igitur, ut

82-114

prius in bello pacem, sic in pace belluni quaerens,

quia suae civitati animorum plus quam virium cernebat esse, ad bell urn palam atque ex edicto gerundum concitat populos, suis per speciem societatis Fidenates colonia Romana proditionem reservat. Veientibus sociis consilii adsumptis pacto transitionis 4 Albanorum ad bellum atque arma incitantur. Cum alios

3

Fidenae aperte descissent, Tullus Mettio exercituque Alba accito contra hostes ducit. Ubi Ani-

eius ab

enem transiit, 1 ad confluentis conlocat castra. Inter eum locum et Fidenas Veientium exercitus Tiberim Hi

6 transierat.

trum cornu consistunt. 3

git

2

acie prope flumen tenuere dex-

Fidenates propius montes Tullus adversus Veientem hostem deriin sinistro

Albanos contra legionem Fidenatium conAlbano non plus animi erat quam fidei. Nee

suos,

locat.

6

:

in

manere ergo nee montes succedit

transire aperte ausus sensim ad

inde, ubi satis subisse sese ratus

;

est, erigit

totam aciem, fluctuansque animo ut tereret

tempus ordines explicat. Consilium erat, qua for7 tuna rem daret ea inclinare vires. Miraculo primo esse Romanis qui proximi steterant, ut nudari latera sua sociorum digressu senserunt inde eques citato ;

1

transierat /$transit n. transiit Z> 2$hi (or hii or hie) et in hi iu Weissenborn :

2

:

:

8

96

derigit

PL

:

dirigit

rt.

fl.

BOOK

I.

xxvn. 1-7

he resorted to evil ones to regain the favour of his countrymen. Accordingly, just as in war he had sought peace, so now in time of peace he desired war. But seeing that his own state was richer in courage than in strength, he stirred up other tribes to make war openly after due declaration while for his own people he reserved the part of the traitor under the disguise of friendship. The men of Fi;

denae, a Roman colony, and the Veientes, whom they admitted to a share in their designs, were induced to commence hostilities by a promise that the Albans would go over to their side. Fidenae having openly revolted, Tullus summoned Mettius and his army from Alba, and led his forces against the enemy. Crossing the Anio, he pitched his camp at the confluence of the rivers. The Veientine army had crossed the Tiber between that place and Fidenae. These troops, drawn up next the river, formed the right wing on the left the Fidenates were posted, nearer the mountains. Tullus marshalled his own men against the Veientine enemy the Albans he posted opposite the army of Fidenae. The Alban commander was as wanting in courage as in loyalty. Not daring, therefore, either to hold his ground or openly to desert, he drew off by imperceptible degrees in the direction of the mountains. Then, when he thought he had got near enough to them, he brought up his whole battle-line to an elevated position, and still irresolute, deployed his ranks with the object of ;

;

consuming time. His purpose was to swing his forces to the side which fortune favoured. At first the Romans posted next to the Albans were amazed when they perceived that their flank was being uncovered by the withdrawal of their allies then a ;

97

B.C.

672 ~ 640

LIVY equo nuntiat regi abire Albanos. Tullus in re trepida duodecim vovit Salios fanaque Pallori ac Pavori.

A.U.C.

2-114

8

Equitem

clara increpans voce, ut hostes exaudirent,

iubet

redire in proelium esse

nihil

:

suo iussu circumduci

;

trepidatione

opus

Albanum exercitum, ut

Fidenatium nuda terga invadant idem imperat ut Id factum magnae parti ;

9 hastas equites erigerent. 1

peditum

Romanorum conspectum

abeuntis Albani

qui viderant, id quod ab rege eo acrius pugnant. Terror ad rati, hostes transit et audiverant clara voce dictum, et exercitus intersaepsit

:

auditum erat

;

magna 10

mani

2

pars Fidenatium, ut quibus coloni additi Roessent, Latine

sciebant.

Itaque, ne

subito

ex collibus decursu Albanorum intercluderentur ab oppido, terga vertunt.

Instat Tullus fusoque Fide-

natium cornu in Veientem alieno pavore perculsum ferocior redit. Nee illi tulere impetum, sed ab effusa 11

Quo postfuga flumen obiectum ab tergo arcebat. quam fuga inclinavit, alii arma foede iactantes in aquam

caeci ruebant,

inter fugae

ante 1

dum

cunctantur in

pugnaeque consilium oppressi.

Romana pugna

erigerent

alii,

alia

atrocior fuit.

erigere erigerent iubeat

5-:

ripis,

Non

M:

erigerent iubeat

(or erigere iubeat, or eriere iubeat, or erigere erigerent iubet, or erigere iubet) n. 2 Romani Walters (following Tan. Faber's ut quibus ut queis . Romaui) ut qui (et qui DL) . Romanis fi. .

.

98

.

.

.

:

.

.

BOOK

I.

xxvn. 7-1

1

horseman galloped up to the king, and told him that the Albans were marching off. In this crisis Tullus vowed to establish twelve Salian priests, 1 and to build shrines to Pallor and Panic. The horseman he reprimanded in a loud voice, that the enemy might overhear him, and ordered him to go back and fight ; there was no occasion for alarm it was by his own command that the Alban army was marching round, that they might attack the unprotected rear of the ;

He also ordered the cavalry to raise their This manoeuvre hid the retreat of the Alban army from a large part of the Roman foot-soldiers those who had seen it, believing what the king had been heard to say, fought all the more impetuously. The enemy in their turn now became alarmed they had heard Tullus's loud assertion, and many of the Fidenates, having had Romans among them as colonists, knew Latin. And so, lest the Albans should suddenly charge down from the hills and cut them off from their town, they beat a retreat. Tullus pressed them hard, and having routed the wing composed of the Fidenates, returned, bolder than ever, to the Veientes, who were demoralized by the panic of their neighbours. They, too, failed to withstand his attack, but their rout was stopped by the river in their rear. When they had fled thus far, some basely threw away their arms and rushed blindly into the water, others hesitated on the bank and were overtaken before they Fidenates.

spears.

;

;

had made up their minds whether to flee or resist. Never before had the Romans fought a bloodier battle. 1 These were the so-called Collini, or Agonales, and were associated with Quirinus, as the Palatini (chap, xx.) were

with Mars Gradivus.

See also v.

lii.

7.

99

B.C.

672 ~ 040

LIVY XXVIII. Turn Albanus

exercitus, spectator certaMettius Tullo devictos minis, deductus in campos. contra Tullus Mettium benigne hostes gratulatur

A.U.O.

;

Quod bene

adloquitur.

manis 2

castris

vertat, castra

iungere iubet

diem posterum

Ubi

parat.

inluxit, paratis

ut adsolet, vocari ad contionem iubet.

Praecones ab extremo

Hi

Albanos.

novitate

Albanos Ro-

sacrificium lustrale in

;

etiam

omnibus,

utrumque exercitum orsi rei

primos excivere moti,

ut

regem

Romanum

contionantem audirent proximi constiEx conposito armata circumdatur Romana

3 tere.

legio 4

;

mora infit

"

centurionibus datum negotium erat ut sine Turn ita Tullus imperia exsequerentur.

:

Romani,

si

quod primum

umquam dis

inde vestrae ipsorum fuit.

5

Dimicatum

ante

alias ullo in bello fuit

immortalibus gratias ageretis, deest

virtuti, hesternum id proelium enim non magis cum hostibus

quam, quae dimicatio maior atque periculosior est, cum proditione ac perfidia sociorum. Nam, ne vos falsa opinio teneat, iniussu

meo Albani

montes, nee imperium illud

meum

subiere ad

sed consilium et

imperii simulatio fuit, ut nee vobis ignorantibus deseri vos averteretur a certamine animus et hosti-

bus circumveniri 6 iniceretur.

norum

est 1

loo

:

l

se ab tergo ratis terror ac fuga

Nee ea culpa quam arguo omnium Albaducem secuti sunt, ut et vos, si quo ego

circumveniri

FID?:

circumuenire

fl.

BOOK

I.

xxvin. 1-6

XXVIII. Then the Alban army, which had been a spectator of the battle, was led down into the plain. Mettius congratulated Tullus on the conquest of his enemies Tullus replied kindly to Mettius, and commanded the Albans in a good hour to join their camp to that of the Romans. He then made preparations to perform, on the morrow, a sacrifice of purification. ;

At dawn, when

all

things were in readiness, he issued

both armies the customary order, convoking them to an assembly. The heralds, beginning at the outskirts of the camp, called out the Albans first, who being moved by the very novelty of the occasion, took their stand close to the Roman king, that they might hear him harangue his army. The Roman to

troops, by previous arrangement, were armed and disposed around them, and the centurions were bidden to execute orders promptly. Then Tullus

began as follows " Romans, if ever anywhere in any war you have had reason to give thanks, first to the immortal gods and then to your own valour, it was in the battle of For you fought not yesterday. only against your enemies, but a harder and more dangerous fight --against the treachery and the perfidy of your allies. For, to undeceive you, I gave no orders that the Albans should draw off towards the mountains. What you heard was not my command, but a trick and a pretended command, devised in order that you might not know you were being deserted, and so be distracted from the fight and that the enemy, thinking that they were being hemmed in on the rear, might be panic-stricken and flee. And yet this guilt which I am charging does not attach to all the Albans they but followed :

;

;

101

B.P.

672 ~ 640

LIVY inde

x.u.c.

declinare voluissem, fecissetis.

agmen

Mettius

82-114

ille

est ductor

machinator

belli,

huius,

signe iam

Mettius idem huius

Mettius foederis Romani Albanique

Audeat deinde

ruptor.

7

itineris

talia alius, nisi in

hunc

Centuriones armati Mettium circumsistunt cetera, ut orsus erat, peragit:

felixque

sit

;

rex

"Quod bonum faustum

populo Romano ac mihi vobisque, Albani,

populum omnem Albanum est,

in-

documentum mortalibus dedero."

Romam traducere in animo

civitatem dare plebi, primores in patres legere,

unam urbem, unam rem publicam facere. Ut ex uno quondam in duos populos divisa Albana res est, sic Ad haec Albana pubes nunc in unum redeat. 1 '

8

inermis ab armatis saepta in variis voluntatibus com9

muni tamen metu cogente silentium

tenet.

Turn

Tullus "Metti Fufeti," inquit, "si ipse discere posses fidem ac foedera servare, vivo tibi ea disciplina a me adhibita esset

genium

est, at

nunc, quoniam tuum insanabile in-

;

tu tuo supplicio doce

humanum genus

ea sancta credere quae a te violata sunt. Ut igitur animum inter ante Fidenatem paulo Romanamque 10

rem ancipitem gessisti, ita iam corpus passim distrahendum dabis." Exinde duabus admotis quadrigis in CUITUS

earum distentum

in diversum

inligat Mettium, deinde Her equi concitati lacerum in utroque 1

IO2

redeat

il

:

redeant

MO.

BOOK

I.

xxvin. 6-10

their general, as you, too, would have done, had I It is Mettius desired to lead you off anywhere. yonder who led this march ; Mettius, too, who contrived this war ; Mettius who broke the treaty between Roman and Alban. Let another dare such a deed hereafter if I do not speedily visit such a punishment on him as shall be a conspicuous warning

mankind." Thereupon the centurions, sword in hand, surrounded Mettius, while the king proceeded " May prosperity, favour, and fortune be with the Roman I people and myself, and with you, men of Alba purpose to bring all the Alban people over to Rome, to grant citizenship to their commons, to enroll the nobles in the senate, to make one city and one state. As formerly from one people the Alban nation was to all

:

!

divided into two, so now let it be reunited into one." Hearing these words the Alban soldiers, themselves unarmed and fenced in by armed men, were constrained, however their wishes might differ, by a common fear, and held their peace. Then Tullus " Mettius said Fufetius, if you were capable ot learning, yourself, to keep faith and abide by treaties, you should have lived that I might teach you this :

;

as

it is,

since your disposition

is

incurable,

you

shall

by your punishment teach the human race sacred the obligations you have violated. Accordingly, just as a little while ago your heart was divided between the states of Fidenae and Rome, so now you shall give up your body to be torn two ways." He then brought up two four-horse chariots, and caused Mettius to be stretched out and made fast to them, after which the horses were whipped up in opposite directions, and bore off in

yet

to hold

103

B.C.

6 2~ ( '

LIVY curru corpus, qua inhaeserant vinculis membra, porAvertere omnes ab tanta foeditate spec-

A.U.O.

11 tantes.

Primum ultimumque illud supplicium apud Romanes exempli parum memoris legum humanarum fuit in aliis gloriari licet nulli gentium mititaculi oculos.

:

ores placuisse poenas. XXIX. Inter haec

2

iam praemissi Albam erant traducerent Romam. Lemultitudinem equites qui Quae giones deinde ductae ad diruendam urbem. ubi iiitravere portas, non quidem fuit tumultus ille nee pavor, qualis captarum esse urbium solet, cum effractis portis stratisve ariete muris aut arce vi capta clamor

per urbem armatorum ommiscet sed silentium triste ao flammaque

hostilis et cursus

3 nia ferro

;

tacita maestitia ita defixit

4

omnium animos

ut prae

secum ferrent deficiente consilio rogitantesque alii alios nunc in liminibus starent, nunc errabundi domos suas ultimum Ut vero iam equitum illud visuri pervagarentur.

metu quid

l

relinquerent, quid

clamor exire iubentium instabat, iam fragor tectorum quae diruebantur ultimis urbis partibus audiebatur, pulvisque ex distantibus locis ortus velut nube inducta omnia impleverat, raptim quibus quisque poterat elatis, cum larem ac penates tectaque in quibus 5

natus quisque educatusque esset relinquentes exirent, iam continens agmen migrantium impleverat vias, et 1

quid Madvig

:

obliti

quid n.

Each family had its lar, a special deity who protected the household, and its penales, guardians of the penus (the family store of provisions). 1

104

BOOK

I.

xxvin. lo-xxix. 5

each of the cars fragments of the mangled body, where the limbs held to their fastenings. All eyes were turned away from so dreadful a sight. Such was the first and last punishment among the Romans of a kind that disregards the laws of humanity. In other cases we may boast that with no nation have

milder punishments found favour. XXIX. While this was going on, horsemen had already been sent on to Alba to fetch the inhabitants to Rome, and afterwards the legions were marched over to demolish the city. When they entered the gates there was not,indeed,thetumultand panic which usually follow the capture of a city, when its gates have been forced or its walls breached with a ram or its stronghold stormed, when the shouts of the enemy and the rush of armed men through the streets throw the whole town into a wild confusion of blood and fire. But at Alba oppressive silence and grief that found no words quite overwhelmed the spirits of all the people too dismayed to think what they should take with them and what leave behind, they would ask each other's advice again and again, now standing on ;

their thresholds,

and now roaming aimlessly through

the houses they were to look upon for that last time. But when at length the horsemen began to be urgent, and clamorously commanded them to come out when they could now hear the crash of the buildings which were being pulled down in the outskirts of die when the dust rising in different quarters had city overcast the sky like a gathering cloud then everybody made haste to carry out what he could, and ;

;

;

1 abandoning their lares and penates, and the houses where they had been born and brought up. And now the streets were filled with an unbroken

forth they went,

B.C.

672 ~

LIVY mutua miseratione

conspectus aliorum

integrabat

lacrimas, vocesque etiam miserabiles exaudiebantur

mulierum praecipue, cum obsessa ab armatis templa augusta praeterirent ac velut captos relinquerent J Egressis urbe Albanis Romanus passim pub-

6 deos.

privataque omiiia tecta adaequat solo, unaque hora quadringentorum annorum opus quibus Alba steterat excidio ac minis dedit; templis tamen deum

lica

ita

edictum ab rege fuerat

eiiim

temperatum

est.

XXX. Roma

interim crescit Albae ruinis.

DupliCaelius additur urbi mons, et quo frequentius habitaretur, earn sedem Tullus regiae

catur civium numerus

2 capit

deinde

2

habitavit. Principes Albaea ut patres, quoque pars rei publicae

ibique

norum

;

in

3

cresceret, legit, lulios, Servilios, Quinctios, Geganios, Curiatios, Cloelios templumque ordini ab se aucto ;

quae Hostilia usque ad patrum nostrorum aetatem appellata est. Et ut omnium ordinum

curiam 3

fecit

vivibus aliquid ex

novo populo adiceretur equitum

decem turmas ex Albanis legit, legiones et veteres eodem supplemento explevit et novas scripsit.

Hac

4 1

urbe

fiducia virium Tullus Sabinis 5-

8

lulios Tullios n.

When

1

his

body

urbem

2

fl.

Sabdlicua

(cf.

ibique deinde Dion. Hal. 1.

bellum

VM 70.

:

indicit,

ibique

and

2.

fl.

79)

:

Clodius was murdered, in 52 B.C., the mob burnt Curia Hostilia, which caught fire and was

in the

destroyed.

106

:

BOOK

I.

xxix. 5~xxx. 4

procession of emigrants, whose mutual pity, as they gazed at one another, caused their tears to start afresh plaintive cries too began to be heard, pro;

ceeding chiefly from the women, when they passed the venerable temples beset by armed men, and left When in captivity, as it seemed to them, their gods. the Albans had quitted the city, the Romans everywhere levelled with the ground all buildings, both public and private, and a single hour gave over to destruction and desolation the work of the four

hundred years during which Alba had stood. But the temples of the gods were spared, for so the king had decreed. XXX. Rome, meanwhile, was increased by Alba's The number of citizens was doubled, the downfall. Caelian Hill was added to the City, and, that it might be more thickly settled, Tullus chose it for the site of the king's house and from that time onwards The chief men of the Albans he made resided there. senators, that this branch of the nation might grow Such were the Julii, the Servilii, the Quinctii, too. He also the Geganii, the Curiatii, and the Cloelii. built, as a consecrated place for the order he had enlarged, a senate-house, which continued to be called the Curia Hostilia as late as the time of our own And that all the orders might gain some fathers. 1 strength from the new people, he enrolled ten 2 squadrons of knights from among the Albans, and from the same source filled up the old legions and enlisted

new

ones.

Confiding in these forces, Tullus declared war on 2 Each squadron contained thirty men. The total number was, therefore, the same as that of the three centuries of

Romulus.

I0 7

B.C.

672 ~ 640

LIVY secundum Etruscos

genti ea tempestate

A.U.C.

opulentis-

8:2-114

5 simae viris armisque.

Utrimque

iniuriae factae ac

nequiquam erant repetitae. Tullus ad Feroniae fanum mercatu frequent! negotiators Roman os comres

prehensos querebatur, Sabini suos prius in lucum Hae causae belli confugisse ac Romae retentos. 6 ferebantur.

Sabini,

baud parum memores et suarum

virium partem Romae ab Tatio locatam et Romanam rem nuper etiam adiectione populi Albani auctam, 7

circumspicere et vicina,

ipsi

externa auxilia.

proximi Etruscorum Veientes.

duas bellorum

iras

maxime

sollicitatis

Etruria erat

Inde ob

resi-

ad defectionem

animis voluntaries traxere, et apud vagos quosdam ex inopi plebe etiam merces valuit. Publico auxilio

nam de cum Romulo iiidutiCum bellum utrimque summa ope para-

nullo adiuti sunt, valuitque apud Veientes ceteris 8

arum

minus mirum

fides.

est

pacta

rent, vertique in eo res videretur, utri prius

inferrent, occupat Tullus in 9

10

agrum Sabinum

arma

transire.

Pugna atrox ad silvam Malitiosam fuit, ubi et peditum quidem robore, ceterum equitatu aucto nuper Ab equitibus replurimum Romana acies valuit. pente invectis turbati ordines sunt Sabinorum nee illis constare nee fuga explicari sine ;

pugna deinde

magna caede

potuit. 1

1

08

i.e.

" Guileful Wood."

BOOK

I.

xxx. 4-10

the Sabines, a nation second only at that time to the Etruscans in its wealth of men and arms. On either side there had been aggressions and refusals to Tullus complained that at the grant satisfaction. shrine of Feronia, in a crowded fair, Roman traders had been seized; the Sabines alleged that, before this, refugees from their country had fled to the grove of These sanctuary, and had been detained in Rome. were put forward as the causes of war. The Sabines, not forgetting that a portion of their own forces had been settled in Rome by Tatius and that the Roman state had recently been further strengthened by the addition of the Alban people, began themselves to look about for outside help. Etruria was close by, and the nearest of the Etruscans were the Veientes. There the resentment left over from the wars was the strongest incentive to revolt, and procured them some volunteers while with certain vagrant and povertystricken plebeians even the prospect of pay was effectual. Official aid there was none, and the Veientes (for there is less to surprise us in the others) held firmly to the truce they had agreed upon with Romulus. While preparations for war were making on both sides with the greatest energy, and success appeared to hinge upon which should first take the field, Tullus anticipated his enemies and invaded the Sabine A desperate battle was fought near the country. Silva Malitiosa, 1 where, owing partly, it is true, to the strength of their infantry, but most of all to their newly augmented cavalry, the Roman army gained the mastery. The cavalry made a sudden charge the ranks of the Sabines were thrown into disorder, and from that moment were unable, without heavy loss, either to hold their own in the fight or to extricate themselves by a retreat. 109 ;

;

B.C.

672 ~ 640

LIVY XXXI.

A.U.C.

Devictis Sabinis

cum

in

maffna gloria mag-

82-114

nisque opibus regnum

Tulli ac tota res

nuntiatum regi patribusque

est

Quod cum

2 lapidibus pluvisse.

in

Romana

esset,

monte Albano

credi vix posset, missis

ad id visendum prodigium, in conspectu baud

quam cum grandinem 3

agunt, crebri cecidere caelo lapides. dire

Visi etiam au-

vocem ingentem ex summi cacuminis ritu

patrio

Albani facerent,

sacra

quoque simul cum patria et aut

Romana

aliter

venti glomeratam in terras

luco, ut

quae

velut dis

relictis oblivioni

dederant,

sacra susceperant aut fortunae, ut

fit,

cultum reliquerant deurn. Romanis quoque ab eodem prodigio novendiale sacrum publice sus-

4 obirati

ceptum

nam

est,

seu voce caclesti ex Albano monte missa

quoque traditur seu haruspicum monitu mansit certe sollemne, ut quandoque idem prodigium id

nuntiaretur, 5

;

f'eriae

per

Hand ita multo Unde cum pigritia

novem

dies agerentur.

post pestilentia

laboratum

militandi oreretur, nulla

est.

tamen

ab armis quies dabatur a bellicoso rege, salubriora etiam credente militiae

6

quam domi iuvenum

corpora

esse, donee ipse quoque longinquo morbo est implicitus. Tune adeo fracti simul cum corpore sunt

spiritus

illi

feroces, ut

qui

iiihil

ante ratus esset

minus regium quam sacris dedere animum, repente omnibus magnis parvisque superstitionibus obnoxius

no

BOOK XXXI.

I.

xxxi. 1-6

After the defeat of the

Sabines,

when

King Tullus and the entire Roman state were at a high pitch of glory and prosperity, it was reported to the king and senators that there had been a rain of As this could scarce be stones on the Alban Mount. credited, envoys were dispatched to examine the prodigy, and in their sight there fell from the sky, like hail-stones which the wind piles in drifts upon the ground, a shower of pebbles. They thought too that they heard a mighty voice issuing from the grove on the mountain-top, which commanded the Albans to celebrate, according to the fashion of their fathers, sacrifices, which as though they had forsaken

the

their gods along with their city, they had given over to oblivion, either adopting Roman rites, or in anger at their fortune, such as men sometimes feel,

abandoning the worship of the gods. The Romans also, in consequence of the same portent, undertook an official nine days' celebration, whether so commanded by the divine utterance from the Alban Mount for this too is handed down or on the At all events it remained a advice of soothsayers. regular custom that whenever the same prodigy was reported there should be a nine days' observance. Not very long after this Rome was afflicted with a This caused a reluctance to bear arms, pestilence. yet no respite from service was allowed by the warlike king (who believed, besides, that the young men were healthier in the field than at home) until he himself contracted a lingering illness. Then that haughty spirit was so broken, with the breaking of his health, that he who had hitherto thought nothing less worthy of a king than to devote his mind to sacred rites, suddenly became a prey to all sorts of

in

B.C.

672 ~ 640

LIVY A.U.C.

82-114

7

degeret religionibusque etiam populum impleret. Vulgo iam homines eum statum rerum qui sub

Numa

rege fuerat requirentes,

8 esset, credebant.

unam opem

aegris

pax veniaque ab dis impetrata Ipsum regem tradunt volventem

corporibus relictam,

si

commentarios Numae, cum ibi quaedam occulta sollemnia sacrificia lovi Elicio facta invenisset, operaturn

iis

sacris se abdidisse

]

curatum

id

sacrum

sed non rite initum aut

;

nee solum nullam

esse,

ei

oblatam

caelestium speciem, sed ira lovis sollicitati prava religione fulmine ictum cum domo conflagrasse. Tullus

magna

gloria belli regnavit annos duos et

triginta.

XXXII. Mortuo Tullo

A.U.C.

ut institutum iam inde

res.

114-133

ad patres redierat, hique interregem nominaverant. Quo comitia habente Ancum Marab

initio erat,

cium regem populus creavit

Numae

patres fuere auctores.

;

ortus, Ancus MarPompili regis nepos, ut Qui regnare coepit, et avitae gloriae filia

2 cius erat.

memor

et quia

proximum regnum,

ab una parte baud

satis

lectis religionibus aut

mum

prosperum

prave

cultis,

ratus sacra publica ut ab

facere,

omnia ea ex commentariis relata

1

iis 5-

:

3

112

proponere

or his fl. relata Sabtllicus

fuerat, aut neg-

longe

Numa

album

3

cetera egregium, 2

antiquissi-

instituta erant

regis pontificem in

in publico iubet.

Inde et

'

is

:

longe g-Gronov.: longeque n. elata (elatain Al 3 ) n.

BOOK

I.

xxxi. 6-xxxn. 2

and filled even the superstitions great and small, minds of the people with religious scruples. Men were now agreed in wishing to recall the conditions

B.C.

672 ~ 640

which had obtained under King Numa, believing that the only remedy left for their ailing bodies was to procure peace and forgiveness from the gods. The king himself, so tradition tells, in turning over the commentaries of Numa discovered there certain occult sacrifices performed in honour of JupiterElicius, and devoted himself in secret to those rites but the ceremony was improperly undertaken or performed, and not only was no divine manifestation vouchsafed him, but in consequence of the wrath of Jupiter, who was provoked by his faulty observance, he was struck by a thunderbolt and consumed in the flames Tullus was greatly renowned in war of his house. and reigned thirty-two years. XXXII. On the death of Tullus, the government reverted, in accordance with the custom established in the beginning, to the seaators, who named an interrex. This official called together the comitia, and the people elected Ancus Marcius king, a choice Ancus Marcius was a which the Fathers ratified. of King Numa Pompigrandson, on the mother's side, When he began to rule he was mindful of his lius. considered that the last grandfather's glory, and all else, had failed to prosper in one reign, excellent in or misconduct of religious respect, owing to neglect observances. Deeming it therefore a matter of the utmost consequence to perform the state sacrifices as Numa had established them, he bade the pontifex of the king copy out all these from the commentaries and display them in public on a whitened table. This act led the citizens, who were eager for peace, ;

"3

B.C.

LIVY civibus otii cupiclis et finitimis civitatibus facta spes *

A.U.C.

114-138

..

L L T mores atque mstituta regem abiturum. Igitur Latini, cum quibus Tullo regnante ictum foedus erat, .

,

.

3 in avi

sustulerant animos, et

manum 4

cum incursionem

in

agrum Ro-

Romanis superbe responsum reddunt, desidem Romanum regem inter Medium sacella et aras acturum esse regnum rati. erat in Anco ingenium, et Numae et Romuli memor; fecissent, repetentibus res

quod avi regno magis necessariam pacem credebat cum in novo turn feroci populo, etiam quod illi contigisset otium sine iniuria, id se

et praeterquam fuisse

hand facile habiturum temptari patientiam et temptatam contemni, temporaque esse Tullo regi aptiora Ut tamen, quoniam Numa in pace 5 quam Numae. ;

religiones

instituisset,

a

se

bellicae

caerimoniae

proderentur, nee gererentur solum sed etiam indicerentur bella aliquo ritu, ius ab antiqua gente Aequicolis, quod nunc fetiales habent, descripsit quo res repetuntur. G

Legatus ubi ad

fines

eorum venit unde

res re-

petuntur, capite velato filo lanae velamen est " cuiusAudi, luppiter," inquit "audite, fines" " audiat fas. nominat sunt cumque geiitis Ego ;

;

publicus nuntius populi Romani legatus venio verbisque meis fides

sum

;

iuste pieque

sit."

Peragit

1 The institution of the fetials was ascribed in chap. xxiv. to Tullus (so also Cic. Rep. ii. 31). Livy is here following another authority, without taking the trouble to remove the Other writers (Dion. ii. 72; Plut. Numa xii.) discrepancy. credit Numa with the institution.

114

BOOK

I.

xxxn. 2-6

and also the neighbouring nations, to hope that he would adopt the character and institutions of his

Hence the

grandfather.

Latins, with

whom

a treaty

had been made in the time of Tullus, plucked up courage, and raided Roman territory, and when called on by the Romans to make restitution, returned an arrogant answer, persuaded that the Roman king would spend his reign in inactivity amid shrines and altars. But the character of Ancus was well balanced, and he honoured the memory of Romulus, And besides having a convicas well as Numa. tion that peace had been more necessary to his grandfather's reign, when the nation had been both young and mettlesome, he also believed that the tranquillity, so free of attack, which had fallen to would be no easy thing for himthe lot of self to compass ; his patience was being tried, and

Numa

when proved would be regarded with contempt, in short the times were better suited to the rule In order however that, as of a Tullus than a Numa. Numa had instituted religious practices in time of peace, he might himself give out a ceremonial of war, and that wars might not only be waged but also declared with some sort of formality, he copied from the ancient tribe of the Aequicoli the law, which the fetials now have, 1 by which redress is demanded. When the envoy has arrived at the frontiers of the people from whom satisfaction is sought, he covers the covering is of wool and his head with a bonnet says: "Hear, Jupiter; hear, ye boundaries of" naming whatever nation they belong to; "let I am the public herald of the righteousness hear

and

!

Roman People missioned

;

let

;

I

my

come duly and

religiously

words be credited."

com-

Then he

"5

B.C.

6

LIVY A.D.C.

7

deinde postulata. Inde lovem testem facit "Si ego impieque illos homines illasque res dedier mihi 1 exposco, turn patriae compotem me numquam :

iniuste

Haec cum

haec quiobvius fuerit, haec portam primus ingrediens, haec forum ingressus, paucis verbis car-

8 siris esse."

cumque

fines suprascandit,

vir

ei

minis concipiendique

iuris iurandi mutatis, peragit.

non deduntur quos exposcit diebus tribus et triginta tot enim sollemnes suiit peractis bellum ita 2 indicit "Audi, luppiter, et tu, lane Quirine, dique omnes caelestes vosque, terrestres, vosque, inferni,

9 Si

10

:

Ego vos tester populum ilium" quicumque nominat " iniustum esse neque ius persolvere. Sed de istis rebus in patria maiores natu consulemus 3 quo pacto ius nostrum adipiscamur." Turn nuntius Romam ad coiisulendum redit. Confestim rex his 4 audite. est

11 ferine

verbis

consulebat

patres

:

"Quarum

rerum,

causarum condixit pater patratus populi Romani Quiritium patri patrato Priscorum Latinorum hominibusque Priscis Latinis/ quas res nee dederunt nee solverunt nee fecerunt, quas res dari, solvi, fieri 6 litium,

7

quern primum sententiam oportuit, die/' inquit ei " Turn ille " Puro pioque 12 rogabat, quid censes?" duello quaerendas censeo itaque consentio conscis:

Inde ordine

coque." 1

MV:

mihi

r.

p.

(or

alii

Po

R

rogabantur;

quandoque

or populi romani or nuntio

populi Romani) mihi (michi 0) n. a lane Perizoniux iuno n. :

3 4

R

cum his (or iis or turn Hachtmann : cum rex his Gruter rex ex his (exis D) fl. Priscis Latinis 0? priscis uel latinis n. :

:

fi

:

6

solvi fieri Aid.

7

ei

116

M

l

:

fieri solui (solui

(or M R^ z

]

:

et n.

F) n.

is)

n.

BOOK

I.

xxxn. 6-12

demands, after which he takes Jupiter to " If I demand witness unduly and against religion that these men and these things be surrendered to me, then let me never enjoy my native land." These words he rehearses when he crosses the boundary line, the same to what man soever first meets him, the same when he enters the city gates, the same when he has come into the market-place, with only a few changes in the form and wording of the oath. If those whom he demands are not surrendered, at the end of three and thirty days for such is the con" he declares war thus ventional number Hear, Jupiter, and thou, Janus Quirinus, and hear all heavenly gods, and ye, gods of earth, and ye of the lower world I call you to witness that this people " is unjust, and does naming whatever people it is But of these matters we not make just reparation. will take counsel of the elders in our country, how Then the messenger we may obtain our right." returns to Rome for the consultation. Immediately the king would consult the Fathers, in some such words as these " Touching the things, the suits, the causes, concerning which the pater patratus of the Roman People of the Quirites has made demands on the pater patratus of the Ancient Latins, and upon the men of the Ancient Latins, which things they have not delivered, nor fulfilled, nor satisfied, being recites his :

:

'

;

:

things which ought to have been delivered, fulfilled, and satisfied, speak," turning to the man whose "what think you ?" opinion he was wont to ask first, Then the other would reply: "I hold that those things ought to be sought in warfare just and righteous ; and The others were then asked so I consent and vote." the question, in their order, and when the majority

117

B.C.

LIVY eorum qui aderant in eandein sententiam bellum erat consensum. Fieri solitum lit fetialis hastam ferratam aut praeustam sanguinearn 1 ad fines eorum ferret et non minus tribus puberibus praesenpars maior

A.U.O. 1 1 4.

1

^fl

ibat,

13 tibus diceret

hominesque

2

"Quod

:

populi Priscorum Latinorum

Prisci Latini adversus

populum Roma-

num

Quiritium fecerunt, deliquerunt, quod populus Romanus Quiritium bellum cum Priscis Latinis iussit

populi Romani Quiritium censuit, consensit, conscivit, ut bellum cum Priscis Latinis fieret, ob earn rem ego populusque Romanus populis Priscorum Latinorum hominibusque Priscis Latinis

esse senatusque

3

bellum indico facioque." 14 fines

repetitae res ac

Id ubi dixisset, hastam in

Hoc

turn modo ab Latinis bellum indictum, moremque eum

eorum emittebat.

posteri acceperunt.

XXXIII. Ancus demandata cura sacrorum

flami-

exercitu novo conscripto

nibus sacerdotibusque

aliis,

profectus, Politorium,

urbem Latinorum,

vi

cepit,

secutusque morem regum priorum, qui rem Romanam auxerant hostibus in civitatem accipiendis, multitu2

dinem omnem Romam traduxit, et cum circa Palasedem veterum 4 Romanorunij Sabini Capitolium

tium,

atque arcem, Caelium montem Albani implessent, Aventinum novae multitudini datum. Additi eodem

baud 3 cives. 1

2 3

4

118

multo post, Tellenis Ficanaque captis, novi Politorium inde rursus bello repetitum, quod

ita

praeustam sauguineam Madvig sanguineam praeustam horainesque Sigonius hominesue (homines M) H. :

:

senatusque

veterum

$-

:

senatusue n.

MP OH Z

:

veterem A.

1

BOOK

I.

xxxn.

12-xxxin. 3

of those present went over to the same opinion, war had been agreed upon. It was customary for the fetial to carry to the bounds of the other nation a cornetwood spear, iron-pointed or hardened in the fire, and in the presence of not less than three grown men to " Whereas the tribes of the Ancient Latins and say men of the Ancient Latins have been guilty of acts :

and offences against the Roman People of the Quirites; and whereas the Roman People of the Quirites has commanded that war be made on the Ancient Latins, and the Senate of the Roman People has approved, agreed, and voted a war with the Ancient Latins I therefore and the Roman People declare and make war on the tribes of the Ancient Latins and the men of the Ancient Latins." Having said this, he would ;

This is the manner hurl his spear into their territory. which at that time redress was sought from the

in

Latins and war was declared, and the custom has been received by later generations.

XXXIII. Ancus delegated the

care of the sacrifices and having enlisted a new army proceeded to Politorium, one of the Latin He took this place by storm, and adopting cities. the plan of former kings, who had enlarged the state

to the flamens

and other

priests,

by making her enemies citizens, transferred the The Palatine was the whole population to Rome. quarter of the original Romans on the one hand were the Sabines, who had the Capitol and the Citadel; on the other lay the Caelian, occupied by the Albans. The Aventine was therefore assigned to the newcomers, and thither too were sent shortly afterwards the citizens recruited from the captured towns of Politorium was then attacked Tellenae and Ficana. ;

119

B.C.

LIVY vacuum occupaverant

eaque causa diruendae urbis eius fuit Romanis, ne hostium sem4 per receptaculum esset. Postremo onuii bello Latino Latini

Prisci

Medulliam compulso aliquamdiu varia victoria

pugnatum

est

;

ibi

nam

;

Marte

incerto,

et urbs tuta

muni-

tionibus praesidioque firmata valido erat, et castris in

aperto positis aliquotiens exercitus Latinus comminus 6

cum Romanis

Ad ultimum

signa contulerat.

bus copiis conisus Ancus acie primum vincit ingenti praeda potens

Romam

redit,

turn

omni;

inde

quoque

multis milibus Latinorum in civitatem acceptis, qui-

Aventinum, ad Murciae laniculum quoque adiectum, non inosed ne quando ea arx hostium esset. Id non

bus, ut iuiigeretur Palatio 6

datae sedes. pia loci,

muniri

1

sol urn

7 urbi placuit.

munimentum opus 8

sed etiam ob commoditatem itineris

sublicio, turn

ponte

primum

in Tiberi facto, coniungi

Quiritium quoque

fossa,

a planioribus aditu

baud parvum Anci regis

locis,

est.

Ingenti incremento rebus auctis cum in tanta multitudine hominum, discrimine recte an per-

peram

facti

confuso,

facinora

clandestina

fierent,

career ad terrorem increscentis audaciae media urbe 1

1

J.

Mueller

:

muro n.

This was the famous Pons Sublicius, of wood, without metal of any sort.

made I2O

muuiri H.

"Pile Bridge,"

BOOK

I.

xxxin. 3-8

a second time, for having been left empty A*' it had been seized by the Ancient Latins, and this gave the

Romans an excuse

for razing the town, lest it should In serve continually as a refuge for their enemies. the end the Latin levies were all forced back upon for some time the fighting was and victory shifted from one side to the other for the city was protected by fortifications and was defended by a strong garrison, and from their

Medullia, where

indecisive ;

open plain the Latin army several times At last, to close quarters with the Romans. throwing all his troops into the struggle, Ancus

camp came

in the

succeeded first in defeating the enemy's army, and then in capturing the town, whence he returned to Rome enriched with immense spoils. On this occasion also many thousands of Latins were granted citizenship. These people, in order that the Aventine be connected with the Palatine, were made to might o settle in the region of the Altar of Murcia. Janiculum was also annexed to the city, not from any lack of room, but lest it might some day become a strongIt was decided not only to hold of Rome's enemies. connect it with the City, for fortify it, but also to greater ease in passing to and fro, by a bridge ot ever built over the Tiber. 1 piles, the first bridge The Quirites' Ditch also, no small protection on the more level and accessible side of town, was the work of King Ancus. When these enormous additions to the community had been effected, it was found that in so great a multitude the distinction between right and wrong had become obscured, and crimes were being secretly committed. Accordingly, to overawe men's growing lawlessness, a prison was built in 121

B.C. f Af\

t"[ fi

LIVY A.U.C.

9

Nee urbs tan turn hoc

inminens foro aedificatur.

rege crevit, sed etiam ager finesque. Silva Maesia Veientibus adempta usque ad mare imperium prolatum et in ore Tiberis Ostia urbs condita, salinae circa factae, egregieque rebus bello gestis aedis lovis

Feretri amplificata.

XXXIV. Anco regnante Lucumo, vir impiger ac Romam commigravit, cupidine maxime ac spe magni honoris, cuius adipiscendi Tarquiniis nam ibi quoque peregrina stirpe oriundus erat divitiis poteiis,

2 facultas

non

fuerat.

Demarati Corinthii

filius

erat,

qui ob seditiones domo profugus cum Tarquiniis forte consedisset, uxore ibi ducta duos filios genuit.

Lucumo atque Arruns fuerunt. Lucumo bonorum omnium heres Arruns prior moritur uxore gravida relicta. Nee diu quam pater

Nomina

his

superfuit patri 3

:

mariet superstes

decessisset,

filio

pater

;

qui cum, ignorans nu-

immemor in puero post avi mortem

rum ventrem

ferre,

testando nepotis nullam sortem

in

bonorum nato ab inopia Egerio inditum noinen. Lucumoni contra omnium heredi bonorum cum divi4 tiae

iam animos facerent, auxit ducta in matrimoloco nata, et quae haud facile

nium Tanaquil summo iis

in quibus

nata erat humiliora sineret ea quo

1 This prison, the Career, may still be seen at the foot of the Capitoline, between the Temple of Concord and the It is thought to be as old as any structure in Rome. Curia. It was used as a place of detention and execution for cona i.e. "Necessitous." demned criminals.

122

BOOK

xxxin. 8-xxxiv. 4

I.

1 And city, above the Forum. was a period of growth, not only for the and boundaries. The City, but also for her lands Maesian Forest was taken from the Veientes, extending Rome's dominion clear to the sea at the Tiber's mouth the city of Ostia was founded, and salt-works were established near-by while in recognition of signal success in war the temple of Jupiter Feretrius was enlarged. XXXIV. In the reign of Ancus one Lucumo, a man of energy and wealth, took up his residence in Rome, and the hope that he might chiefly from ambition there achieve a station such as he had found no ophe portunity of attaining in Tarquinii for though had been born there himself, his race was alien to He was the son of Demaratus of that place also. Corinth, who had been driven from home by a

the midst of the this reign

;

;

;

political upheaval.

Happening to settle

in Tarquinii,

he had married there and had tw o sons,named Lucumo and Arruns. Lucumo survived his father and inherited all his property Arruns died before his father, Demaratus did not long leaving O his wife with child. r

;

survive Arruns, and, unaware that his son's wife was to become a mother, he died without making proWhen the babe vision for his grandson in his will. his grandfather was dead, and having no share in the inheritance, he was given the name of 2 Egerius, in consequence of his penniless condition. LucumOj on the other hand, was heir to the whole The self-confidence implanted in his bosom estate.

was born

wealth was heightened by his marriage with who was a woman of the most exalted birth, and not of a character lightly to endure a humbler rank in her new environment than she had

by

his

Tanaquil,

123

B.C.

LIVY A.U.C.

5 innupsisset. 1

Spernentibus

Lucumonem

Etruscis

114-138 2

exsule

advena ortum, ferre indignitatem non potuit

oblitaque ingenitae erga patriam caritatis,

virum honoratum

videret,

Roma

6 Tarquiniis cepit.

dummodo

consilium migraiidi ab

est

ad id potissima 3 visa

:

novo populo, ubi omnis repentina atque ex virtute nobilitas sit, futurum locum forti ac strenuo viro

in

;

regnasse Tatium

Numam 7

Sabinum, arcessitum in regnum a Curibus, et Ancum Sabina matre ortum

nobilemque una imagine suadet ut cupido

tantum 8

patria esset.

Romam.

Ad

4

alis

esse.

cum

Facile per-

et cui Tarquinii

materna

Sublatis itaque rebus amigrant

laniculum forte veiitum

carpento sedenti leniter

Numae

honorum

erat.

Ibi ei

uxore aquila suspensis demissa

pilleum aufert, superque

carpentum

cum magno

clangore volitans, rursus velut ministerio divinitus missa capiti apte reponit inde sublimis ;

Accepisse id augurium laeta dicitur Tanaquil, perita, ut volgo Etrusci, caelestium prodigiorum Excelsa et alta sperare conplexa virum mulier.

9 abiit.

iubet

:

earn alitem, ea regione caeli et eius dei nun-

tiam venisse, circa

cium

fecisse,

summum

levasse

culmen hominis auspi-

humano superpositum

capiti

ea quo innupsisset Weissenborn ac cum (or hec cum or 2 ea cum) innupsisset n. exsule R*F3 5- exulem n. 3 potissima Gronov. potissimum fl. 1

:

:

:

4

I2 4

leniter

5-

:

leuiter H.

BOOK

I.

xxxiv.

4-9

enjoyed in the condition to which she had been born. The Etruscans looked with disdain on Lucumo, the She could son of a banished man and a stranger. not endure this indignity, and forgetting the love she owed her native land, if she could only see her husband honoured, she formed the project of emigrating from Tarquinii. Rome appeared to be the most suitable place for her purpose amongst a new people, where all rank was of sudden growth and founded on worth, there would be room for a brave and strenuous man the City had been ruled by Tatius the Sabine, it had summoned Numa to the sovereignty from Cures, even Ancus was the son of a Sabine mother, and She could point to no noble ancestor but Numa. had no trouble in persuading a man who was eager ;

;

distinction, to whom Tarquinii was only his mother's birthplace. They therefore gathered their to Rome. They possessions together and removed had come, as it happened, as far as Janiculum, when, as they were sitting in their covered waggon, for

an eagle poised on its wings gently descended upon them and plucked off Lucumo's cap, after which, as if rising noisily above the car and again stooping, sent from heaven for that service, it deftly replaced the cap upon his head, and departed on high. This augury was joyfully accepted, it is said, by Tanaquil, who was a woman skilled in celestial prodigies, as was the case with most Etruscans. Embracing her husband, she bade him expect transcendent greatness such was the meaning of that bird, appearing from that quarter of the sky, and bringing tidings from the highest part of the man had been that god concerned in the omen the eagle had removed the adornment placed upon a mortal's head that it might :

;

;

125 VOL.

I.

F

B .c. 64(W51G

LIVY A.U.C.

eidem redderet. Has spes secum portantes urbem ingress! tationesque

10 decus. ut divinitus

114-138

domicilioque ibi 11 edidere nomen.

com para to

L.

sunt,

Tarquinium Priscum

Romanis conspicuum eum novitas

divitiaeque faciebant ; et ipse fortunam benigno adloquio, comitate invitandi beneficiisque quos poterat sibi conciliando adiuvabat, donee in regiam quoque 12

de eo fama perlata liaris

est.

/

Notitiamque earn brevi apud

dextereque obeundo officia in famiamicitiae adduxerat iura, ut publicis pariter ac

regem

liberaliter

privatis consiliis bello

domique interesset

et per

om-

nia expertus postremo tutor etiam liberis regis tes-

tamento

institueretur.

XXXV.

138-176

Regnavit Ancus annos quattuor et

viginti,

cuilibet superiorum

et gloria

mum

par.

Eo magis Tarquinius

erant. 2

regum belli pacisque et artibus lam filii prope puberem aetatem ut

instare

comitia regi creando fierent

quam

pri-

quibus indictis

;

sub tempus pueros venatum ablegavit. Isque primus et petisse ambitiose regnum et orationem dicitur habuisse ad conciliandos plebis animos compositam 3 se

l

:

non rem novam petere, quippe qui non primus,

quod quisquam indignari mirarive

Romae peregrinus regnum

posset, sed tertius

adfectet

;

et

Tatium non

ex peregrino solum, sed etiam ex hoste regem factunij

et

Numam 1

126

se

ignarum urbis non petentem

Duker: cum

(turn

F

l )

se n.

in

BOOK

I.

xxxiv. 9-xxxv. 3

restore it with the divine approbation. Such were their hopes and their reflections as they entered the City. Having obtained a house, they gave out the

B.C.

64

-616

name of Lucius Tarquinius Priscus. The Romans regarded him with special interest, as a stranger and

man

of wealth, and he steadily pushed his fortune own exertions, making friends wherever possible, by kind words, courteous hospitality, and benefactions, until his reputation extended even to the He had not long been known in this way to palace. the king before the liberality and adroitness of his services procured him the footing of an intimate friend. He was now consulted in matters both of public and private importance, in time of war and in time of peace, and having been tested in every way was eventually even named in the king's will as guardian of his children. XXXV. Ancus reigned four and twenty years, a king inferior to none of his predecessors in the arts of peace and war and in the reputation they conferred. By this time his sons were nearly grown. Tarquinius was therefore all the more insistent in urging that the comitia should be held without delay to choose a When the meeting had been proclaimed, and king. the day drew near, he sent the boys away on a hunting expedition. Tarquinius was the first, they say, to canvass votes for the kingship and to deliver a speech designed to win the favour of the commons. He pointed out that it was no new thing he sought he was not the first outsider to aim at the sovereignty in Rome a thing which might have occasioned indignation and astonishment, but the third. Tatius indeed, had been not merely an alien but an enemy when he was made king while Numa was a stranger a

by

his

;

;

127

B.C.

616 ~ 578

LIVY A.U.C.

4

138-176

regnum

ultro accitum

Romam cum grasse officiis

ex quo sui potens

aetatis eius

fungantur homines, Romae ;

magistro, ipso

G

se,

fuerit,

coniuge ac fortunis omnibus commi-

maiorem partem

;

5 patria vixisse

ritus

:

didicisse

se

qua

quam

civilibus

in vetere

domi militiaeque sub haud paenitendo Anco rege, Romana se iura, Romanos ;

obsequio et observantia in regem

cum omnibus, benignitate certasse. Haec eum haud

erga alios falsa

cum rege

memorantem

ipso

ingenti

consensu populus Romanus regnare iussit. Ergo virum cetera egregium secuta quam in petendo

habuerat etiam regiiantem ambitio est firmandi

sui

regni

memor centum

quam augendae

in patres legit, qui

;

publicae

deinde minorum

gentium sunt appellati, factio haud dubia beneficio in curiam venerant. 7

nee minus

rei

regis, cuius

Bellum primum cum Latinis gessit, et oppidum Apiolas vi cepit, praedaque inde maiore quam quanta belli fama fuerat revecta, ludos ppulentius ibi

8

instructiusque

mum

circo

locus

est.

spectacula

quam

priores reges fecit.

Turn

pri-

qui nunc maximus dicitur designatus Loca divisa patribus equitibusque ubi sibi

quisque

facerent;

fori

appellati.

The senate had doubtless shown its disapproval of the accession of Tarquinius, who now sought to render its opposition futile by doubling the membership and appointing 1

none but

128

his

own

supporters.

BOOK

I.

xxxv. 3-8

to the City, and, far from seeking the kingship, had been invited to come and take it. As for himself, he had no sooner become his own master than he

actually

had removed to Rome with his wife and all his property. For the greater part of that period of life during which men serve the state he had lived in Rome, and not in the city of his birth. Both in civil life and in war he had had no mean instructor King Ancus himself had taught him Roman laws and Roman rites. In subordination and deference to the king he had vied, he said, with all his hearers in generosity to his fellow-subjects he had emulated the king himself. Hearing him advance these not unwarranted claims, the people, with striking unanimity, named him king. The result was that the man, so admirable in all other respects, continued even after he had obtained the sovereignty to manifest the same spirit of intrigue which had governed him in seeking it and being no less concerned to strengthen his own power than to enlarge the state, he added a hundred members to the senate, who were known thenceforward as Fathers of the " lesser families," and formed a party of un;

;

wavering loyalty to the king, to whom they owed their admission to the Curia. 1 His first war was with the Latins, whose town of Returning thence with Apiolae he took by storm. more booty than the rumours about the war had led people to expect, he exhibited games on a more splendid and elaborate scale than former kings had It was then that the ground was first marked done. Places were out for the circus now called Maximus. divided amongst the Fathers and the knights where they might each make seats for themselves these were called 'rows.' They got their view from seats ;

129

B.C.

LIVY A u.c. 138-170

9 Spectavere

duodenos

furcis

lesque, ex Etruria

ab

terra

Ludicrum

alta sustinentibus pedes.

maxime

acciti.

spectacula

fuit equi pugi-

Sollemnes deinde

annul mansere ludi, Roman! magnique varie appel10 lati.

Ab eodem

rege et circa forum privatis aedi-

ficanda divisa sunt loca

;

porticus tabernaeque factae./

XXXVI. Muro quoque lapideo circumdare urbem parabat, cum Sabinum bellum coeptis intervenit. Adeoque ea rent hostes 2

subita res fuit, ut prius

quam obviam

ire ac

Anienem

transi-

prohibere exercitus

Romanus posset. Itaque trepidatum Romae est, et primo dubia victoria magna utrimque caede pugnatum est. Reductis deinde in castra hostium copiis datoque spatio Romanis ad comparandum de integro

equitem maxime suis deesse Ramnes, Titienses, Luceres, quas centurias Romulus scripserat, addere alias constituit bellum, Tarquinius, viribus ratus, ad

3

suoque insignes relinquere nomine./ Id quia inauguRomulus fecerat, negare Attus Navius, inclitus

rate

ea tempestate augur, neque mutari neque novum Ex eo ira nisi aves addixissent, posse. " ut ferunt, Age dum," regi mota, eludensque artem, " divine tu, inaugura fierine possit, quod nunc inquit,

4 constitui,

1 ego mente concipio." Cum ille augurio rem ex" futuram hoc animo dixisset, pertus profecto Atqui

1

130

augurio Tan. Faber

:

in

augurio

XI.

BOOK

I.

xxxv. 9-xxxvi. 4

raised on props to a height of twelve feet from the

ground.

The entertainment was furnished by

and boxers, imported

From lar

that time the

for the

horses

most part from Etruria. to be a regu-

Games continued

annual show, and were called indifferently the

Roman and the Great Games. It was the same king", O too, who apportioned building sites about the Forum among private citizens, and erected covered walks

*

and booths.

XXXVI. He

was

also preparing to build a stone

when a Sabine war interrupted And so sudden was the invasion, that they had crossed the Anio before the Roman army was wall around the City, his plans.

able to march out and stop them, so that the City was thrown into a panic. The first battle was

heavy losses on both sides. The enemy then withdrew into their camp, affording the Romans an opportunity to renew their preparations

indecisive, with

for the war.

Tarquinius believed that cavalry was what he chiefly lacked. To the Ramnes, Titienses, and Luceres, the centuries which Romulus had enrolled, he therefore determined to add others, and to give them his own name as a permanent distinction. But since this was a matter in which Romulus had obtained the sanction of augury before acting, it was asserted by Attus Navius, a famous augur of those days, that no change or innovation could be introduced unless the birds had signified their approval. The to king's ire was aroused by this, and he is " reported have said, in derision of the science, Come now, divine seer Inquire of your augury if that of which !

am now

thinking can come to pass." When Attus, that it would having taken the auspices, replied " surely come to pass, the king said, Nay, but this is I

B.C.

LIVY agitavi,"

"te novacula cotem discissurum

inquit,

;

cape haec et perage quod aves tuae fieri posse portendunt." Turn ilium baud cunctanter discidisse 6

cotem

Statua Atti capite velato, quo in loco

ferunt.

res acta est, in comitio in gradibus ipsis

eodem

curiae fuit; cotem quoque

6

ad laevam

loco sitam fuisse

memorant, ut esset ad posteros miraculi eius monumentum. Auguriis certe sacerdotioque augurum tantus honos accessit ut nihil belli domique postea nisi

7

gereretur, concilia

auspicato

vocati,

summa

merentur.

populi, exercitus

rerum, ubi aves non admisissent,

Neque

diri-

turn Tarquinius de equitum cen-

1 quicquam mutavit; numero alterum tantum

turiis

adiecit, ut mille et octingenti equites in tribus cen-

8 turiis essent.

Posteriores

modo sub

bus, qui additi erant, appellati sunt

;

iisdem nomini-

quas nunc, quia

geminatae sunt, sex vocant centurias.

XXXVII. Hac

parte copiarum aucta iterum

Sabinis confligitur.

creverat

Romanus

Sed praeterquam quod

exercitus, ex occulto etiam additur

magnam vim

dolus, missis qui

ripa iacentem, ardentem

pacta sublicisque 1 1

3

132

lignorum, in Anienis

in flumen conicerent

;

itivante accensa ligna et pleraque ratibus

toque

3

cum

M

l

ven2

in-

haererent, pontem incendunt

alterum tantum Lipsins ratibus

cum

viribus

:

tantum alterum A.

Gronov.: in ratihus n.

sublicisque G'ronov.: sublicis (or

-iis)

A.

BOOK what

I

was thinking-

whetstone with a

what your birds

xxxvi. 4-xxxvn.

I.

of,

i

that you should cleave a

Take them, and accomplish " declare is possible Whereupon, razor.

!

they say, the augur, without a sign of hesitation, cut the whetstone in two. There was a statue of Attus standing, with his head covered, on the spot where the thing was done, in the comitium, even at the steps on the left of the senate-house tradition adds that the whetstone also was deposited in the same place, to be a memorial of that miracle to posterity. However this may be, auguries and the augural ;

priesthood so increased in honour that nothing was afterwards done, in the field or at home, unless the auspices had first been taken popular assemblies, musterings of the army, acts of supreme importance all were put off when the birds refused their consent. Neither did Tarquinius at that time make any change in the organization of the centuries of knights. Their numerical strength he doubled, so that there were now eighteen hundred knights, in three centuries. But though enrolled under the old names, the new men were called the " secondary knights," and the centuries are now, because doubled, known as the "six centuries." XXXVII. When this arm of the service had been enlarged, a second battle was fought with the Sabines. And in this, besides being increased in strength, the Roman army was further helped by a stratagem, for men were secretly dispatched to light a great quantity of firewood lying on the bank of the Anio, and throw it into the river. favouring wind set the wood in a blaze, and the greater part of it lodged against the boats and piles, where it stuck fast and :

A

B.C.

616 ~ 5

'

LIVY A.U.O.

2

138-176

Ea quoque res in pugna terrorem attulit Sabinis, et fusis l eadem fugam impedit multique mor tales, cum ;

hostem

effugissent, in flumine ipso periere

fluitantia

arina

;

quorum

ad urbem cognita in Tiberi prius

quam nuntiari posset insignem victoriam Eo proelio praecipua equitum gloria fuit utrimque ab cornibus positos, cum iam pelleretur paene

3 fecere.

;

media peditum suorum acies, ita incurrisse ab lateribus ferunt, ut non sisterent modo Sabinas legiones ferociter instantes cedentibus, sed subito in

Montes

4 averterent.

pauci tenuere

maxima

;

perterritis ratus, spoliis

cumulo 6

hostium

accensis, pergit ;

et

ab

Romam

missis,

erat

ingenti

votum Volcano

id

est,

Tarquinius instandum

praeda captivisque

exercitum inducere

dictum

pars, ut ante

flumen acti sunt.

6 equitibus in

fugam

effuso cursu Sabini petebant, et

porro in agrum

Sabinum

quamquam male gesta res

erat nee gestures melius sperare poterant, tamen,

quia consulendi res non dabat spatium, ire obviam Sabini tumultuario milite

iam prope rebus pacem

XXXVIII.

Collatia

agri erat Sabinis 1

;

iterumque

ibi fusi perditis

petiere.

et

quidquid citra Collatiam

ademptum

;

Egerius

et fusis Joe. Gronov.: effusis

fi.

fratris

hie

BOOK

I.

xxxvir.

2-xxxvm.

i

This was another source of set the bridge on fire. alarm to the Sabines during the battle, and upon their being routed the same thing hindered their flight, so that many of them escaped the Romans only while their shields floated to perish in the stream down the Tiber toward the City, and, being recognized, gave assurance that a victory had been won almost sooner than the news of it could be brought. In this battle the cavalry particularly distinguished themselves. They were posted on either flank of the Romans, and when the centre, composed of infantry, was already in retreat, they are said to have charged from both sides, with such effect that they not only checked the Sabine forces, which were pressing hotly forward as their enemy gave way, but suddenly put them to flight. The Sabines made for the mountains in a scattered rout, and indeed a few gained that Most of them, as has been said before, were refuge. driven by the cavalry into the river. Tarquinius thought it proper to follow up his victory while the other side was panic-stricken he therefore sent the booty and the prisoners to Rome, and after making a huge pile of the captured arms and setting fire to it, in fulfilment of a vow to Vulcan, pushed forward at the head of his army into the enemy's country. Although defeat had been the portion of the Sabines, and another battle could not be expected to result in better success, still, as the situation allowed no room for deliberation, they took the field with what soldiers they could hastily muster, and being then routed a second time and fairly reduced to extremities, they sued for peace. XXXVIII. Collatia, and what land the Sabines had on the hither side of Collatia, was taken from ;

;

B.C. 61 - 578

LIVY erat

fiiius

Deditosque

Collatiae in praesidio relictus. regis Collatinos ita accipio eamque dedi-

formulam esse ; rex interrogavit " Estisne vos legati oratoresque missi a populo Collatino, ut " vos populumque Collatinum dederetis ? "Sumus."

2 tionis

:

"Estne "Est."

populus Collatinus in sua potestate?" " Deditisne vos populumque Collatinum,

urbem, agros, aquam, terminos, delubra,

utensilia,

humanaque omnia in meam populique Ro" mani dicionem ? "Dedimus." " At ego recipio."

divina

3

Bello Sabino perfecto Tarquinius triumphans Romam Inde Priscis Latinis bellum fecit. Ubi nus-

4 redit.

quam ad

universae rei dimicationem

singula oppida

Latinum Cameria,

mentum 5

est,

ad

omne nomen

domuit. Corniculum, Ficulea Vetus, 1 Crustumerium, Ameriola, Medullia, Nohaec de Priscis Latinis aut qui ad Latinos

defecerant capta oppida. Pax deinde est facta. Maiore inde aninio pacis opera incohata quam

quanta mole gesserat G

ventum

circumferendo arma

domi

esset

quam

bella, ut

non quietior

militiae fuisset

;

nam

et

poj)ulus

muro

lapi-

deo, cuius exordium operis Sabino bello turbatum erat,

urbem qua nondum munierat cingere

parat, et

forum aliasque interiectas collibus convalles, quia ex planis locis baud facile evehebant aquas, cloacis 2 fastigio in Tiberim ductis

infima urbis

1

2

loca

circa

Medullia Aid.: medulla n. 1 aquas cloacia RD' ^ aqua se (or aqua se or aquas e :

cloacis n.

136

BOOK

I.

xxxvin. 1-6

them, and Egerius, the son of the king's brother, was the town with a garrison. The surrender of the Collatini took place, I understand, in accordance with this formula the king asked, " Are you the legates and spokesmen sent by the People of Collatia to surrender yourselves and the People of Collatia ? We are." Is the People of Collatia its own master? It is." Do you surrender yourselves and the People of Collatia, city, lands, water, boundary marks, shrines, utensils, all appurtenances, divine and human,into my power and that of the Roman People?" "We do." "I receive the surrender." Upon the conclusion of the Sabine war Tarquinius returned to Rome and triumphed. He then made war against In this campaign there was no the Ancient Latins. general engagement at any point, but the king led his army from one town to another until he had subdued the entire Latin race. Corniculum, Ficulea left in

:

'

'

'

'

'

'

Vetus, Cameria, Crustumerium, Ameriola, Medullia, and Nomentum these were the towns which were captured from the Ancient Latins, or from those who had gone over to the Latins. Peace was then made. From that moment the king devoted himself to peaceful undertakings with an enthusiasm which was even greater than the efforts he had expended in waging war, so that there was no more rest for the people at home than there had been in the field. For he set to work to encircle the hitherto unfortified parts of the City with a stone wall, a task which had been interrupted by the Sabine war and he drained the lowest parts of the City, about the Forum, and the other valleys between the hills, which were too flat to carry off the flood-waters easily, by means of sewers so made as to slope down toward the Tiber. ;

137

B.C.

LIVY A.r.c.

aream ad aedem

7 siccat, et

in Capitolio lovis,

quam

voverat bello Sabino, iam praesagiente animo futuram olim amplitudinem loci occupat fundamentis.

XXXIX. Eo tempore

in regia

prodigium visu

l

eventuque mirabile fuit. Puero dormienti, cui Servio 2 nomen, caput arsisse ferunt multorum in Plurimo igitur clamore inde ad tantae conspectu.

Tullio fuit 2

rei miraculum orto excitos reges, et cum quid am familiarium aquain ad restinguendum ferret, ab regina retentum, sedatoque earn tumultu moveri vetu-

puerum donee sua sponte experrectus esset. et flammam abisse. Turn abducto

isse

3

Mox cum somno

secretum viro Tanaquil, " Viden 3 tu puerum hunc," " tarn humili cultu educamus ? Scire

in

quern

inquit, licet

hunc lumen quondam rebus

futurum

praesidiumque

regiae

dubiis

nostris

adflictae

;

proinde

materiam ingentis publice privatimque decoris omni Inde puerum liberum

4 indulgentia nostra nutriamus."

coeptum haberi, erudirique artibus, quibus ingenia ad magnae fortunae cultum excitantur. Evenit luvenis evasit vere facile quod dis cordi esset.

loco

indolis regiae, nee,

cum

Romanae

quisquam

5 potuit, filiamque ei

quaereretur gener Tarquinio,

iuventutis

cumque de causa tantus 1

visu

0-

:

uisum

ulla

arte

suam rex despondit. illi

honos habitus credere

fl.

puero dormienti, cui Servio Tullio fuit nomen words are missing or corrupted in the other MSS. 3 viden Jl/V uidene D'2 uidesne n. 2

:

133

conferri

Hie qua-

:

M?

:

these

BOOK

I.

xxxvin. 6-xxxix. 5

Finally, with prophetic anticipation of the splendour

which the place was one day to possess, he laid foundations for the temple of Jupiter on the Capitol, which he had vowed in the Sabine war. XXXIX. At this time there happened in the house of the king a portent which was remarkable alike in its manifestation and in its outcome. The story is that while a child named Servius Tullius lay sleeping, his head burst into flames in the sight of many. The general outcry which so great a

miracle called forth brought the king and queen to the place. One of the servants fetched water to quench the fire, but was checked by the queen, who stilled the uproar and commanded that the boy should not be disturbed until he awoke of himself. Soon afterwards sleep left him, and with it disappeared the flames. Then, taking her husband aside, " Do Tanaquil said you see this child whom we are bringing up in so humble a fashion ? Be assured he will one day be a lamp to our dubious fortunes, and a protector to the royal house in the day of its Let us therefore rear with all solicitude distress. one who will lend high renown to the state and to our family." It is said that from that moment the boy began to be looked upon as a son, and to be trained in the studies by which men are inspired It was a thing easily to bear themselves greatly. accomplished, being the will of Heaven. The youth turned out to be of a truly royal nature, and when Tarquinius sought a son-in-law there was no other young Roman who could be at all compared to Servius and the king accordingly betrothed his daughter to him. This great honour, for whatever cause conferred on him, forbids us to suppose that :

;

139

B.C. 6 ~ 6(l

LIVY prohibet serva natum eum parvumque ipsum servisse. Eorum magis sententiae sum qui Corniculo capto

urbe fuerat, gravidam

Ser. Tulli, qui princeps in ilia

viro occiso

nita esset,

uxorem, cum inter reliquas captivas cogob unicam nobilitatem ab regina Romana

prohibitam ferunt servitio partum Romae edidisse in domo 1 inde tanto beneficio et

6 Prisci Tarquini

;

auctam

inter mulieris fainiliaritatem in

domo

et

puerum, ut

a parvo eductum, in caritate atque honore

fortunam matris, quod capta patria in hosfuisse tium manus venerit, ut serva natus crederetur fe;

cisse.

XL. Duodequadragesimo ferme anno, ex quo regmodo sed apud patres plebemque longe maximo honore nare coeperat Tarquinius, non apud regem

2 Ser.

Tullius erat.

Turn Anci

filii

duo, etsi antea

semper pro indignissimo habuerant se patrio regno tutoris fraude pulsos, regnare

modo

impensius 3

Romae advenam non

vicinae, sed ne Italicae quidem iis

quidem ad porro ad

indignitas crescere,

se rediret

fere

stirpis, turn

ne ab Tarquinio

regnum, sed praeceps inde

servitia caderet, ut in

centesimum

si

eadem

civitate post

annum quod'2 Romulus, deo

gnatus deus ipse, tenuerit regnum donee in 1

2

140

in

domo

5-

:

domo H. quam

quod Madvig

:

A.

proterris

BOOK his

mother was a

slave

I.

xxxix. S-XL. 3

and that he himself had been

in a state of servitude as a child.

am

rather of the opinion of those who say, that on the capture of Corniculum, when Servius Tullius, the chief man of that city, had been slain, his wife, who was great with child, had been recognized amongst the other captive women, and on the score of her unique nobility had been rescued from slavery by the Roman I

queen, and had brought forth her child at Rome in the house of Priscus Tarquinius in the sequel this ;

act of generosity led to a growing intimacy between the women, and the boy, as one reared from childhood in the palace, was held in affection and it was his mother's misfortune, who by the capture of her native town came into the power of its enemies, which gave rise to the belief that Servius was born of a slave woman. XL. It was now about thirty-eight years since Tarquinius had begun to reign, and not only the king, but the Fathers and the commons too, held Servius Tullius in the very highest honour. Now the two sons of Ancus had always considered it a great outrage that they had been ousted from their father's kingship by the crime of their guardian, and that Rome should be ruled by a stranger whose descent was derived from a race not only remote but actually not even Italian. But their indignation was vastly increased by the prospect that even after Tarquinius' death the sovereignty would not revert to them, but, plunging down to yet baser depths, would fall into the hands of slaves so that where, a hundred years before, Romulus, a god's son and himself a god, had borne sway, so long as he remained on earth, in that self-same state a slave and

esteem

;

;

141

B.C.

LIVY

Cum

fuerit, id servus serva

natus possideat.

mune Roman! nominis

turn praecipue id

dedecus

modo

regnum Romae

pate-

et iniuriae dolor in

Tarquinium ipsum magis Servium eos stimulabat, et quia gravior

in

ultor caedis,

generum

superesset, rex futurus erat

si

Servio

turn

privatus,

delegisset

5 videbatur,

ob haec

quam quemcumque alium

occiso

eundem

regni

heredem

erant uterque agrestibus

consueti

vestibule regiae rixae in se

quam

facinus, quibus

ferramentis,

omnes apparitores

dicere

;

coerciti

averteret,

alter

Dum

regem per-

vociferari et certatim alter

ab

lictore et iussi in

tandem obloqui desistunt

7 posito orditur.

;

appellarent clamorque eorum

Primo uterque obstrepere

in

convertunt

regios

penitus in regiam pervenisset, vocati ad

alteri

Ex

potuere tumultuosissime specie

cum ambo regem

6 gunt.

facturus

ipsi regi insidiae parantur.

pastoribus duo ferocissimi delecti ad

;

intentus in

elatam

relictoque in volnere telo

vicem

unus rem ex com-

eum

se rex totus

securim in caput deiecit,

ambo

se foras eiciunt.

XLI. Tarquinium moribundum cum qui 142

non

Ferro igitur earn arcere contumeliam statuunt.

quam

inde,

domus suae

stirpe salva

virili

advenis, sed servis etiam

4 ret.

Sed

Anci regis

si

fore,

com-

circa erant

BOOK

I.

XL. 3~xLi.

i

the son of a slave woman would be king. It would be not only a general disgrace to the Roman name, but particularly to their own house, if during the lifetime of Ancus' sons it should be open not only to strangers, but even to slaves to rule over the Romans. They therefore determined to repel that insult with the sword. But resentment at their wrong urged them rather against Tarquinius himself than against Servius, not only because the king, if he survived, Avould be more formidable to avenge the murder than a subject would be, but because if Servius should be dispatched it seemed probable that the kingdom would be inherited by whomsoever else Tarquinius might choose to be his son-in-law. For these reasons they laid their plot against the

king himself. Two very desperate shepherds were selected to do the deed. Armed with the rustic implements to which they were both accustomed, they feigned a brawl in the entrance-court of the palace and, making as much noise as possible, attracted the attention of all the royal attendants ; then they appealed to the king, until their shouts were heard inside the palace and they were sent for and came before him. At first each raised his voice and tried to shout the other down. Being re-

pressed by the lictor and bidden to speak in turn, they finally ceased to interrupt each other, and one of them began to state his case, as they had planned beforehand. While the king, intent upon the speaker, turned quite away from the other shepherd, the latter lifted his axe and brought it down upon his head. Then, leaving the weapon in the wound, they both ran out of doors.

XLI. The dying Tarquinius had hardly been caught

M3

B.C.

16 -578

LIVY illos fugientes lictores comprehendunt. Clamor inde concursusque populi, mirantium l quid

excepissent,

rei

Tanaquil inter tumultum claudi regiam

esset.

2 iubet, arbitros eicit.

opus sunt,

Simul quae curando volneri

spes subesset, sedulo conparat,

tamquam

2 simul, si destituat spes, alia praesidia molitur.

ostendisset,

cum paene exsanguem virum dextram tenens orat ne inultam mor-

tem

ne socrum inimicis ludibrio esse

vio

3

Ser-

propere accito

soceri,

"Tuum

est," inquit, "Servi,

eorum qui

alienis

si vir es,

sinat.

regnum, non

manibus pessimum facinus

fecere.

Erige te deosque duces sequere, qui clarum hoc fore

caput divino quondam circumfuso igni portenderunt.

Nunc

te

caelestis excitet flamma,

ilia

scere vere.

nunc expergi-

Et nos peregrin! regnavimus

non unde natus

sis,

mea

4 torpent, at tu

qui

;

sis,

Si tua re subita consilia

reputa.

Cum

consilia sequere."

clamor

impetusque multitudinis vix sustineri posset, ex superiore

parte aedium per fenestras

versas 3 5

lum Tanaquil

adloquitur.

Novam viam

in corpus descendisse 1

mirantium

2

eicit /?$-

:

$-

:

;

fi.

;

ferrum baud

iam ad se redisse

mirantum

eiecit

popu-

lubet bono animo esse

subito ictu

sopitum fuisse regem

144

in

habitabat enim rex ad lovis Statoris

3

(or

;

mirandum)

versas

5-

:

:

alte

inspectum n.

uersus

ft.

BOOK

I.

XLI.

1-5

arms of the bystanders when the fugitives up were seized by the lictors. Then there was an uproar, as crowds hurried to the scene, asking one another in amazement what the matter was. In the midst of the tumult Tanaquil gave orders to close the She busily got palace, and ejected all witnesses. together the remedies needful for healing a wound, as if there were still hope, taking at the same time other measures to protect herself in case her hope in the

should fail her. Having hastily summoned Servius, she showed him her husband's nearly lifeless body, and grasping his right hand, besought him not to suffer the death of his father-in-law to go unpunished, nor his mother-in-law to become a jest to her enemies. "To you, Servius," she cried, "if you are a man, belongs this kingdom, not to those who by the hands of others have committed a dastardly crime. Arouse yourself and follow the guidance of the gods, who once declared by the token of divine fire poured out upon this head that you should be a famous man. Now is the time for that heaven-sent flame to quicken you Now wake in earnest We, Consider what too, were foreigners, yet we reigned. you are, not whence you were born. If your own counsels are benumbed in this sudden crisis, at least use mine." When the shouting and pushing of the crowd could hardly be withstood, Tanaquil went up into the upper storey of the house, and through a window looking out upon the Nova Via for the king lived near the temple of Jupiter the Stayer addressed the populace. She bade them be of good cheer the king had been stunned by a sudden blow the steel had not sunk deep into his body he had already recovered consciousness the blood had been !

!

:

;

;

;

145

B.C.

616~ 578

LIVY volnus absterso cruore

;

omnia

salubria esse

dere prope diem ipsum eos visuros Tullio iubere iura

populum

cum

interim

;

alia regis

Ser.

;

eum

munia

esse.

dicto audientem esse

redditurum obiturumque

6 Servius

confi-

;

trabea et lictoribus prodit ac sede regia

de

consulturum se regern Itaque per aliquot dies, cum iam exspirasset Tarquinius, celata morte per speciem alienae fungendae vicis suas opes firmavit. Turn demum sedens

alia decernit,

aliis

esse simulat.

1 palam factum est comploratione in regia orta. Servius praesidio firmo munitus primus iniussu populi

7

voluntate pat rum regnavit.

comprensis

2

sceleris ministris

Anci ut

liberi

iam

turn,

vivere

tantas esse opes Servi nuntiatum est,

regem et Suessam Pome-

tiam exsulatum ierant.

XLII. Nee iam publicis magis

consiliis

Servius

quam privatis munire opes, et ne, qualis Anci liberum animus adversus Tarquinium fuerat, talis adversus se Tarquini liberiim esset, duas

filias

iuvenibus

Lucio atque Arrunti Tarquiniis, iungit nee fati necessitatem humanis consiliis, tamen rupit quin invidia regni etiam inter domesticos infida omnia

2 regiis,

;

atque infesta faceret. 1

2

est

$-

:

comprensis $-Ald.

:

com

con-) prensis (or -pressis) or

146

Peropportune ad praesentis

et n. (or con-) pressis or

cum comprehensis

cum com n.

(or

BOOK

I.

XLI. 5-xLii. 2

wiped away and the wound examined all the symptoms were favourable she trusted that they would soon see Tarquinius himself; meanwhile she com;

B.C.

;

manded that the people should obey Servius Tullius, who would dispense justice and perform the other Servius went forth in the royal duties of the king. robe, accompanied by lictors, and sitting in the king's seat rendered judgment in some cases, while in regard to others he gave out that he would consult the king. In this way for several days after Tarquinius had

breathed his last he concealed his death, pretending that he was merely doing another's work, while he was really strengthening his own position then at last the truth was allowed to be known, from the lamentations which arose within the palace. Servius surrounded himself with a strong guard, and ruled at first without the authorization of the people, but with the consent of the Fathers. The sons of Ancus, upon the arrest of the agents of their crime and the report that the king was alive and that Servius was so strong, had already gone into voluntary exile at Suessa Pometia. XLI I. Servius now took steps to assure his posiIn order tion by private as well as public measures. that the sons of Tarquinius might not show the same animosity towards himself which the sons of ;

Ancus had felt towards Tarquinius, he married his two daughters to the young princes, Lucius and But he could not break the Arruns Tarquinius. and jealousy of force of destiny by human wisdom ;

power, even among the members of his household, created an atmosphere of treachery and hosMost opportune for the tranquil preservation tility. his

147

^^^

LIVY quietem status bellum cum Veientibus 3 indutiae

exierant

aliisque

Etruscis

iam enim

sumptum.

eo bello et virtus et fortuna enituit Tulli

In

fusoque ingenti hostium exercitu baud dubius rex seu patrurn seu plebis animos periclitaretur, Romam rediit. 4

Adgrediturque inde ad pacis longe ut

quemadmodum Numa

ita

5

;

maximum

Servium conditorem omnis in

civitate discriminis

ordinumque quibus inter gradus dignitatis naeque aliquid interlucet, poster! fama ferrent.

fortu-

Cen-

rem saluberrimam tanto future ex quo belli pacisque munia non viritim, ut

sum enim imperio,

opus,

divini auctor iuris fuisset,

instituit,

ante, sed pro habitu

pecuniarum

fierent

;

turn classes

centuriasque et hunc ordinem ex censu discripsit/ vel

paci

decorum

centum milium 1

discripsit

vel

bello.

aeris aut

R

:

XLIII. Ex

2

iis,

qui

maiorem censum haberent

descripsit n.

2

iis

Aid.: his n.

Perhaps a reference to the hundred years' truce with (xv. 5), for Livy has not mentioned any war with Veil in the interval, though one is implied in the statement (xxxiii. 9) that the Veientes surrendered the Maesian Forest, in the reign of Ancus. 2 The organisation now to be described was primarily 1

Romulus

designed to increase the fighting strength of Rome. Formerly the right to bear arms had belonged solely to the Now plebeians were to be given a place in the patricians. army, which was to be reclassined according to every man's property, i.e. his ability to provide himself a more or less complete equipment for the field. See Dion. Hal. iv. 16-21 ; Cic. Rep. ii. 39.

148

BOOK

XLII. 2-XLIII.

I.

I

of the existing state of things was a war which was undertaken against the people of Veil for the and the other Etruscans. truce l had now run out In this war the bravery and good fortune of Tullius and when he had utterly dewere conspicuous feated the vast army of his enemies, he found on returning to Rome that his title to the kingship was no longer questioned, whether he tested the feeling He then of the Fathers or that of the commons. addressed himself to what is by far the most imas Numa had established portant work of peace religious law, so Servius intended that posterity should celebrate himself as the originator of all distinctions among the citizens, and of the orders which clearly differentiate the various grades of rank and fortune. For he instituted the census, 2 a most useful thing for a government destined to such wide dominion, since it would enable the burdens of war and peace to be borne not indiscriminately, as hereHe then tofore, but in proportion to men's wealth. distributed the people into classes and centuries ;

:

according to the following scale, which was based upon the census and was suitable either for peace or XLII I. Out of those who had a rating of a war hundred thousand asses 3 or more he made eighty :

3 The as was originally a rod of Capital, not income. copper a foot long and divided into twelve inches (unciae). Some time during the regal period weight was substituted for measure in appraising the as, and it began to be stamped with the figure of an ox, which was the source of the Latin name for money, viz. pecunia. From being a full pound the as was gradually reduced, till, in the Second Punic War, What its value may have it came to weigh only one ounce. been in the time of Servius is a highly speculative question. See the note in the edition of Book I. by H. J. Edwards (pp. 179 ff.).

149

B.C. *

LIVY octoginta confecit centurias, quadragenas seniorum 1 prima classis omnes appellati; seniores ad urbis custodiam ut praesto essent, iuvenes ut foris

A.U.C.

2 ac iuniorum;

Arma

bella gererent.

his

imperata galea, clipeum,

omnia ex acre, haec ut tegumenta corporis essent tela in hostem hastaque et gladius. Additae huic classi duae fabrum centuriae, quae sine arm is stipendia facerent datum munus ut machinas in bello facerent. 2 Secunda classis intra centum usque ad quinque et septuaginta milium censum ocreae, lorica,

;

3

;

4

ex iis, senioribus iunioribusque, viginti Arma imperata scutum pro conscriptae centuriae. 6 clipeo et praeter loricam omnia eadem. Tertiae instituta, et

4 milium censum esse voluit classis 3 quinquaginta totidem centuriae et hae 5 eodemque discrimine aetatium factae. Nee de armis quicquam mutatum, In quarta classe census ocreae tantum ademptae. quinque et viginti milium totidem centuriae factae arma mutata, nihil praeter hastam et verutum da;

6

;

7 turn.

Quinta

classis

aucta

;

centuriae triginta factae

;

;

fundas lapidesque missiles hi secum gerebant. His accensi cornicines tubicinesque/ in duas 8 centurias Undecim milibus haec classis censebatur. distributi. 8

Hoc minor census reliquam multitudinem liabuit Ita inde una centuria facta est immunis militia. ;

1

2

prima g-F^R* prime R ? facerent Lipsius ferrent :

:

:

primo n. 1.

3

tertiae classis

*

quinquaginta Sobius in quinquaginta XI. 6 his lac. Perizonius hae 5- haec fl.

*

$-

:

tertia classis

Cl.

:

:

7

8

tubicinesque 5- tibicinesque H. duas Sigonius (cf. Dion. Hal. iv. 17,

:

in his

:

3)

:

tres A.

fl.

BOOK

I.

XLIII.

1-8

centuries, forty each of seniors and of juniors; these were all known as the first class the seniors were to be ready to guard the city, the juniors to wage war abroad. The armour which these men were required to provide consisted of helmet, round ;

shield, greaves,

and breast-plate,

the

of

all of bronze, for bodies their offensive weapons were a spear and a sword. There were added to this class two centuries of mechanics, who were to serve without arms to them was entrusted the duty of fashioning siege-engines in war. The second class was drawn up out of those whose rating was between a hundred thousand and seventy-five thousand of these, seniors and juniors, twenty cen-

protection

their

;

;

;

were enrolled. The arms prescribed for them were an oblong shield in place of the round one, and everything else, save for the breast-plate, as in turies

the class above. He fixed the rating of the third class at fifty thousand a like number of centuries was formed in this class as in the second, and with the same distinction of ages neither was any change made in their arms, except that the greaves were In the fourth class the rating was twentyomitted. five thousand the same number of centuries was formed, but their equipment was changed, nothing being given them but a spear and a javelin. The ;

;

;

was made larger, and thirty centuries were These men carried slings, with stones for missiles. Rated with them were the horn-blowers and trumpeters, divided into two centuries. Eleven thousand was the rating of this class. Those who were assessed at less than this amount, being all the rest of the population, were made into a single When the century, exempt from military service. fifth class

formed.

B.C.

578 ~ 34

LIVY pedestri exercitu ornato distributoque equitum ex

A.U.C.

176-220

9 primoribus civitatis

item

duodecim

alias centurias, tribus

scripsit centurias.

ab Romulo

institutis,

Sex sub

iisdem quibus inauguratae erant nominibus fecit. Ad equos emendos dena milia aeris ex publico data, et

quibus equos alerent, viduae attributae, quae bina milia aeris in annos singulos penderent.

Haec omnia

Deinde est pauperibus inclinata onera. non enim, ut ab Romulo traditum honos additus

10 in dites a

;

ceteri servaverant reges, viritim suffragium

gradus

promisee omnibus datum

iure

eodemque

facti,

eadem est,

vi

sed

ut neque exclusus quisquam suffragio

videretur et vis omnis penes primores civitatis esset. 11

Equites enim vocabantur primi octoginta hide priibi l si variaret, quod raro inclassis centuriae ;

mae

;

cidebat, institutum ut

2

nee fere unquam infra 12

mos

Nee

pervenirent.

secundae ita

classis vocarentur,

3 descenderunt, ut ad

mirari oportet

infi-

hunc ordinem,

qui nunc est post expletas quinque et triginta tribus duplicate

earum numero

centuriis iuniorum senior-

4 unique, ad institutam ab Ser. Tullio summam non 13 convenire. Quadrifariam enim urbe divisa regioni-

bus collibusque qui habitabantur, partes eas tribus 1

centuriae

;

ibi

5-

:

centuriae

primum peditum uocabantur

ibi n.

Nordk

2

incidebat, institutum ut

3

descenderunt f descenderent H. ad 5- se (or eese, or sed) ad n. :

4

:

I5 2

:

inciJebat ut

fl.

BOOK

I.

XLIII.

8-13

equipment and distribution of the infantry had been thus provided for, Servius enrolled twelve centuries of knights out of the leading men of the state. He likewise formed six other centuries three had been instituted by Romulus employing the same names which had been hallowed to their use by For the purchase of horses they were alaugury. lowed ten thousand asses each from the state treasury, and for the maintenance of these horses unmarried

women were designated, who had to pay two thousand asses each, every year. All these burdens were shifted from the shoulders of the poor to those of the rich. The latter were then granted special manhood suffrage, implying equality

privileges

:

for

of power and

of rights, was no longer given promiscuously to all, as had been the practice handed down by Romulus and observed by all the other kings ; but gradations were introduced, so that ostensibly no one should be

excluded from the suffrage, and yet the power should rest with the leading citizens. For the knights were called upon to vote first ; then the eighty centuries if there were any disagreement of the first class :

there, which rarely happened, it was provided that the centuries of the second class should be called ; and they almost never descended so far as to reach

the lowest citi/ens. Nor ought it to cause any surprise that the present organization, which exists since the increase of the tribes to thirty-five, and the doubling of their number in the matter of the junior and senior centuries, does not correspond with the total established by Servius Tullius. For, having divided the City according to its inhabited regions and hills into four parts, he named them "tribes," a word

153

B.C.

578 ~ 534

L1VY nam eius quoex censu conferendi ab eodem mita que aequahter ratio est neque eae tribus ad centuriarum distribu-

appellavit. ut ego arbitror, ab tribute ,. ',;. f

A.U.C.

J7&-220

;

;

tionem numerumque quicquam pertinuere. XLIV. Censu perfecto, quern maturaverat metu legis de incensis latae cum vinculorum minis mortis-

omnes cives Romani, equites peditesin suis quisque centuriis in campo Martio prima que, 2 luce adessent. Ibi instructum exercitum omnem que, edixit, ut

suovetaurilibus

1

idque conditum lustrum censendo finis factus est. Milia

lustravit; is

2

appellatum, quia octoginta eo lustro civium censa dicuntur

adicit

;

scriptorum antiquissimus Fabius Pictor eorum qui 3

arma

ferre possent

eum numerum

fuisse.

Ad

earn

multitudinem urbs quoque amplificanda visa est. Addit duos colles, Quirinalem Viminalemque inde ;

deinceps auget Esquilias, ibique ipse, ut loco dignitas fieret, habitat. Aggere et fossis et muro circum4

dat urbem ita pomerium profert. Pomerium, verbi vim solam intuentes, postmoerium interpretantur esse est autem magis circamoerium, locus quern in condendis urbibus quondam Etrusci, qua murum ;

;

1 suovetaurilibus corruptions) n.

2

is

Rhenanus

Gronovius "ex

cod.

:

sue oue taurilibus (or other

Mureti"

:

in

fl.

Tribiitum comes from tribus (not vice versa, as Livy has which meant originally "third part," but lost the numerical force and became simply "part," "district," like the French " quartier," which Walde compares. 2 Dion. iv. 13, and Strabo, v. 3, 7, make Servius the first to include the Esquiline in the City. Livy appears to have 1

it),

154

BOOK

I.

XLIII.

i3~xLiv. 4

for this likederived, I suppose, from "tribute"; wise the same king planned to have apportioned nor had equitably, on the basis of the census these tribes anything whatever to do with the distribution or the number of the centuries. XLIV. Upon the completion of the census, which had been expedited by fear of a law that threatened with death and imprisonment those who failed to register, Servius issued a proclamation calling on all Roman citizens, both horse and foot, to assemble at daybreak, each in his own century, in the Campus 1

;

There the whole army was drawn up, and Martius. a sacrifice of a pig, a sheep, and a bull was offered by the king for its purification. This was termed the " closing of the lustrum," because it was the last act in the enrolment. Eighty thousand citizens are said to have been registered in that census the most ancient of the historians, Fabius Pictor, adds that this was the number of those capable of bearing To meet the wants of this population it was arms. apparent that the City must expand, and so the king added two hills, the Quirinal and the Viminal, after which he proceeded to enlarge the Esquiline, 2 going there to live himself, that the place might obtain a good reputation. He surrounded the City with a rampart, trenches, and a wall, and so extended the "pomerium." This word is interpreted by those who look only at its etymology as meaning "the tract behind the wall," but it signifies rather "the tract on both sides of the wall," the space which the Etruscans used formerly to consecrate with augural ;

thought of him as merely increasing the extent of that district. Conway and Walters adopt O's Viminal em que, Viminulem, and Oronov's Esquiliis, thus reconciling Livy with Dion, and Strabo.

155

B.C.

578 ~

LIVY ducturi erant. certis circa terminis inaugurate conse-

A.U.C.

176-220

crabant, ut neque interiore parte aedificia moenibus

continuarentur, quae nunc volgo etiam coniungunt, et extrinsecus puri aliquid ab humano cultu pateret 6

soli.

Hoc

spatium, quod neque habitari neque arari

erat, non magis quod post murum esset quam quod murus post id, pomerium Romani appellarunt et in urbis incremento semper, quantum moenia profas

;

cessura erant tantum termini hi consecrati proferebantur.

XLV. Aucta

civitate

omnibus domi et ad

magnitudine urbis, formatis ad pacis usus, ne semper

belli et

armis opes adquirerentur, consilio augere imperium 2 conatus est, simul et aliquod

addere urbi decus.

turn erat inclitum Dianae Ephesiae

fanum

;

id

lam com-

muniter a civitatibus Asiae factum fama ferebat.

Eum

consensum deosque consociatos laudare mire

Servius inter proceres Latinorum,

cum

quibus publice

privatimque hospitia amicitiasque de industria iunxerat. Saepe iterando eadem perpulit tandem, ut

3

Romae fanum Dianae Romano facerent. Ea

Romam

esse,

populi

Latini

cum populo

erat confessio caput

rerum

de quo totiens armis certatum

fuerat.

1 Pomerium at first meant the boundary-line itself, then the strip of land left free within the wall, and finally was loosely used of the strip on both sides of the wall.

156

BOOK

I.

XLIV. 4-xLv. 3

ceremonies, where they proposed to erect their wall, establishing definite limits on either side of it, so that they might at the same time keep the walls free on their inward face from contact with buildings, which now, as a rule, are actually joined to them, and on the outside keep a certain area free from human uses. This space, which the gods forbade men to inhabit or to till, was called "pomerium" by the Romans, quite as much because the wall stood behind it as because it stood behind the wall and as the city grew, these consecrated limits were always pushed out for as great a distance as the walls themselves were to be advanced. 1 ;

XLV. When

the king had promoted the grandeur by enlarging the City, and had shaped all his domestic policy to suit the demands of peace as well as those of war, he was unwilling that arms should always be the means employed for strengthening Rome's power, and sought to increase her sway by diplomacy, and at the same time to add something to the splendour of the City. Even at that early date of the state

the temple of Diana at Ephesus enjoyed great renown. It was reputed to have been built through the cooperation of the cities of Asia, and this harmony and community of worship Servius praised in superlative terms to the Latin nobles, with whom, both officially and in private, he had taken pains to establish a footing of hospitality and friendship. By dint of reiterating the same arguments he finally carried his point, and a shrine of Diana was built in Rome by the nations of Latium conjointly with the Roman This was an admission that Rome was the People. a point which

capital

had

so often

been disputed 157

VOL.

I.

O

B.C.

578 ~ 534

LIVY quamquam

Id

A.U.C. 17(5-220

omnium

omissuni iam ex

orum ob rem

totiens infeliciter

cura Latin-

temptatam armis

videbatur, uni se ex Sabinis fors dare visa est private 4 consilio

cuidam

imperil

Bos in Sabinis nata

reciperandi.

patri familiae dicitur miranda magnitudine

fixa per multas aetates cornua in vestibule templi Dianae moiiumentum ei fuere miraculo. 5 Habita, ut erat, res prodigii loco est et cecinere

ac specie

;

;

Dianae immolasset, 1 carmen pervenerat ad antiidque

vates, cuius civitatis earn civis ibi fore

6

imperium

;

stitem fani Dianae Sabinusque, ut prima apta dies sacrificio visa est, bovem Romam actam deducit ad

fanum Dianae

et ante

aram

statuit.

Ibi

antistes

Romanus, cum eum magnitudo victimae celebrata fama movisset, memor responsi Sabinum ita adlo" quitur

:

tu, hospes, paras ?" inquit,

Quidnam

ceste sacrificium Dianae facere

perfunderis flumine 7 Religione

tactus

?

?

"in-

Quin tu ante vivo

Infima valle praefluit Tiberis." omnia, ut prodigio

hospes, qui

responderet eventus, cuperet rite facta, extemplo Interea Romanus immolat descendit ad Tiberim.

Dianae bovem.

Id mire gratum regi atque civitati

fuit.

XLVI. regnum 1

2

158

Servius

2 quamquam iam usu baud dubie

possederat,

tamen quia interdum

iactari

immolasset Rhenan.'. immolassent n. l dubiae (or dubiem or dubiuin) dubie (or Al*}

M

:

fi.

BOOK

I.

XLV. 3-xLvi.

i

But though it seemed that the Latins had lost all interest in this contention after the repeated failure of their appeals to war, there was one man amongst the Sabines who thought that he saw an opportunity to recover the empire by a shrewd plan of his own, In the Sabine country, on the farm of a certain head of a family, there was born a heifer of extraordinary size and beauty a marvel to which the horns afterwards bore testimony, for they were fastened up for many generations in the vestibule of Diana's temple. This heifer was regarded as a prodigy, as indeed it was soothsayers prophesied that the state whose citizens should sacrifice the animal to Diana would be the seat of empire, and this prediction had reached the ears of the priest of Diana's shrine. On the earliest day which seemed suitable for the sacrifice, the Sabine drove the heifer to Rome, and bringing her to the shrine of Diana, There the Roman priest, led her up to the altar. moved by the great size of the victim, which had been much talked of, and recalling the prophecy, asked the Sabine, " What is this that you are doing, with force of arms.

;

;

stranger

Not

so

!

?

Would you

sacrifice, unpurified, to

First bathe in a

running stream

;

Diana

?

the Tiber

by in the bottom of the valley." The stranger, touched by a scruple and wishing to do everything according to ritual, that the prodigy might be answered by the event, at once descended to the Tiber. Meanwhile the Roman offered the heifer to Diana, an act which was exceedingly acceptable to the king and the citizens. XLVI. Servius had by this time a definite preflows

scriptive right to the

supreme power.

Still,

hearing

159

B.C.

5 8 ~ 534 '

LIVY voces a iuvene Tarquinio audiebat se iniussu populi

A.U.C.

176-220

...

,

regnare, concihata prius voluntate plebis agro capto

ex hostibus viritim diviso ausus est ferre ad populum, tantoque consensu

vellent iuberentne se regnare

quanto baud quisquam 2

Tarquinio spem adfectandi regni eo impensius, quia de agro plebis 2 patrum voluntate senserat agi, criminandi

Neque ea minuit

;

alius ante rex est declaratus.

res

immo

;

adversa 1

Servi apud patres cresceiidique in curia sibi occasio-

nem datam

ratus est, et ipse iuvenis ardentis animi

domi uxore Tullia inquietum aiiinium stimulante. Tulit enim et Romana regia sceleris tragici exem-

et 3

plum, ut taedio regum maturior veniret libertas regnuni esset quod scelere parttim

mumque 4

Hie

ulti-

foret.

Prisci Tarquini regis filius ne-

L. Tarquinius

posne fuerit parum liquet pluribus tamen auctoribus filium ediderim fratrem habuerat Arruntem ;

5 Tarquinium, mitis ingenii iuvenem.

ante dictum

est,

duae Tulliae regis

et ipsae longe dispares moribus.

His duobus, ut filiae

Forte

nupserant,

ita inciderat

ne duo violenta ingenia matrimonio iungerentur

for-

Romani, quo diuturnius Servi regnum esset constituique civitatis mores possent. tuna, credo, populi

1

*

1

160

The

M PO

adversa voluntate

reference

is

2

5-

:

? adversam (or -um) uoluntatem n. :

to the stories of Atreus

H.

and Oedipus.

BOOK

I.

XLVI. 1-5

that the young Tarquinius now and then threw out a hint that he was reigning without the consent of the people, he proceeded to gain the goodwill of

the commons by dividing among all the citizens the land obtained by conquest from the enemy after which he made bold to call upon the people to vote whether he should be their ruler, and was declared king with such unanimity as none of his predecessors had experienced. Yet the circumstance did not lessen Tarquinius's hopes of obtaining the On the contrary, perceiving that the bekingship. stowal of land on the plebeians was in opposition to the wishes of the senate, he felt that he had got the better opportunity of vilifying Servius to the Fathers and of increasing his own influence in the senate-house. He was a hot-headed youth himself, and he had at hand, in the person of Tullia his wife, one who goaded on his restless spirit. For the royal house of Rome produced an example of tragic guilt, as others had done, 1 in order that loathing of kings might hasten the coming of liberty, and that the end of reigning might come in that reign which was the This Lucius Tarquinius fruit of crime. whether he was the son or the grandson of King Tarquinius Priscus is uncertain but, following the majority of had a brother, historians, I would designate him son Arruns Tarquinius, a youth of a gentle disposition. These two, as has been said before, had married the two Tullias, daughters of the king, themselves of widely different characters. Chance had so ordered matters that the two violent natures should not be united in wedlock, thanks doubtless to the good fortune of the Roman People, that the reign of Servius might be prolonged and the traditions of ;

;

161

B.C.

578~ 53

'

LIVY A.U.C.

6

Angebatur ferox Tullia

materiae in viro neque

nihil

17C-220

tota in ad cupiditatem neque ad audaciam esse alterum aversa l Tarquinium eum mirari, eum virum ;

dicere ac regio sanguine ortum 7

:

spernere sororem,

quod virum nacta muliebri cessaret audacia. trahit celeriter similitude eos, ut fere

malo aptissimum femina ortum est.

;

fit

:

Con-

malum

sed initium turbandi omnia a

Ea

secretis viri alieni adsuefacta

sermonibus nullis verborum contumeliis parcere de et se rectius viro ad fratrem, de sorore ad virum ;

viduam

et ilium caelibem

quam cum 8 ignavia

futurum

inpari iungi, ut

esset.

Si

sibi

dedissent virum, domi

se

fuisse contendere,

elanguescendum aliena

eum, quo digna

esset,

di

propediem visuram regnum

quod apud patrem videat. Celeriter adulescentem suae temeritatis implet. 2 Prope continuatis funeribus cum domos vacuas novo matrimonio fecisfuisse,

9

sent,

quam

iunguntur nuptiis magis non prohibente Servio adprobante.

XLVII. Turn vero infestius coepit

in dies infestior Tulli senectus,

regnum

esse.

lam enim ab

scelere

ad aliud spectare mulier scelus, nee nocte nee interdiu virum conquiescere pati, ne gratuita praeterita 2 parricidia essent

:

non

D

sibi defuisse cui

nupta dice-

? versa (or versam or adversa) CL. aversa j- adversa 2 Between implet and prope the MSS. give the words Arruns Tarquinius et Tullia minor which Walters brackets. 1

:

162

:

BOOK

I.

XLVI. 6-XLVII. 2

It was distressing to the state become established. the headstrong Tullia that her husband should be destitute of ambition and enterprise. With her whole him she soul she turned from him to his brother she admired, him she called a man and a prince despised her sister because, having got a man for Their simia mate, she lacked a woman's daring. larity soon brought these two together, as is generbut ally the case, for evil is strongly drawn to evil it was the woman who took the lead in all the mischief. Having become addicted to clandestine meetings with another's husband, she spared no terms of insult when speaking of her own husband to his brother, or of her sister to that sister's husband. She urged that it would have been juster for her to be unmarried and for him to lack a wife than for them to be united to their inferiors and be compelled to languish through the cowardice of others. If the gods had given her the man she deserved she would soon have seen in her own house the royal power which she now saw in her father's. It was not long before she had inspired the young man with her own temerity, and, having made room in their respective houses for a new marriage, by deaths which followed closely upon one another, they were joined together in nuptials which Servius rather ;

:

;

tolerated than approved. XLVI I. From that moment the insecurity of the aged Tullius and the menace to his authority increased with each succeeding day. For the woman was already looking forward from one crime to another, nor would she allow her husband any rest by night or day, lest the murders they had done before should be without effect. She had not wanted a

163

B.C.

578 ~

LIVY A.U.C.

cum quo

nee

retur.

176-220

tacita serviret

defuisse qui se

;

regno dignum putaret, qui meminisset se esse Prisci Tarquini filium, qui habere quam sperare regnum

"Si tu

3 mallet.

4

is

es cui

et virum et

regem appello

mutata res

est

Quin accingeris

quod ?

est

:

domus 5

te

di

istic

Non

quiniis, ut patri tuo,

tibi

sin

esse

me

arbitror,

minus, eo nunc peius

cum

ignavia est scelus.

ab Corintho nee ab Tar-

peregrina regna moliri necesse

penates

regia et in

nuptam ;

patriique

domo

et

patris

imago et

regale solium et

Aut

Tarquinium creat vocatque regem.

si

nomen ad haec

est animi, quid frustraris civitatem ? Quid te ut regium iuvenem conspici sinis ? Facesse hinc Tarquinios aut Corinthum, devolvere retro ad stir-

parum

6 pern,

fratris

similior

quam

patris."

His aliisque

increpando iuvenem instigat, nee conquiescere ipsa potest, si, cum Tanaquil peregrina mulier tantum

animo ut duo continua regna viro ac deinceps genero dedisset, ipsa regio semine orta nullum momentum 1 in dando adimendoque regno

moliri potuisset

His muliebribus instinctus

7 faceret.

circumire patres

;

;

D-R*$-\

Tarquinius

minorum maxime gentium beneficii ac pro eo gratiam

allicere donis iuvenes

momentum

164

prensare

admonere paterni

repetere 1

et

furiis

;

momenmentum

cum de

D

:

se ingentia

monumentum

n.

BOOK

I.

XLVII.

2-7

man

just to be called a wife, just to endure servitude with him in silence she had wanted one who should deem himself worthy of the sovereignty, who bethought him that he was the son of Tarquinius Priscus, who preferred the possession of the " If kingship to the hope of it. you are he," she cried, " whom I thought I was marrying, I call you both man and king if not, then I have so far changed for the worse, in that crime is added, in ;

;

your case, to cowardice. Come, rouse yourself! You are not come, like your father, from Corinth or Tarquinii, that you must make yourself king in a strange land the gods of your family and your ancestors, your father's image, the royal palace, with its throne, and the name of Tarquinius create and proclaim you Else, if you have no courage for this, why do king. you cheat the citizens ? why do you suffer yourself to be looked on as a prince ? Away with you to TarSink back into the rank of your quinii or Corinth " family, more like your brother than your father With these and other taunts she excited the young man's ambition. Nor could she herself submit with patience to the thought that Tanaquil, a foreign woman, had exerted her spirit to such purpose as twice in succession to confer the royal power upon her husband first, and again upon her son-in-law if Tullia, the daughter of a king, were to count for ;

!

!

nothing in bestowing and withdrawing a throne. Inspired by this woman's frenzy Tarquinius began to go about and solicit support, especially among the heads of the lesser families, whom he reminded of his father's kindness to them, and desired their favour in return the young men he attracted by both by the great things he promised to do gifts ;

;

165

B.C.

LIVY pollicendo turn regis criminibus omnibus locis cres-

jk.n.c.

176-220

Postremo, ut iam agendae

8 cere. est,

stipatus

agmine armatorum

rei

in

tempus visum forum

inrupit.

Inde omnibus perculsis pavore in regia sede pro curia 9

sedens patres in curiam per praeconem ad

regem Tarquinium

Convenere extemplo,

citari iussit.

iam ante ad hoc praeparati,

alii

alii

metu ne non

venisse fraudi esset, novitate ac miraculo attoniti et 10

iam de Servio actum

rati.

ab stirpe ultima orsus

antea, inito, populi, 11

num

Ibi

Tarquinius maledicta

servum servaque natum post

parentis sui,

non interregno, ut

comitiis habitis,

non per suffragium

mortem indignam non

:

non auctoribus Ita

occupasse.

patribus, muliebri ita

natum,

dono reg-

creatum regem, fau-

torem infimi generis hominum, ex quo ipse alienae honestatis 12 dissimo

nia

cuique

quondam

instituisse

ereptum primoribus agrum

divisisse

;

odio

sordi-

omnia onera quae commu-

fuerint, inclinasse in primores civitatis

;

censum, ut insignis ad invidiam locuple-

tiorum fortuna esset, et parata unde, ubi egentissimis largiretur. 1

166

sit,

untie ubi

M

:

ubi a.

l

vellet,

BOOK

I.

XLVII.

7-12

himself, and by slandering the king as well, he everywhere strengthened his interest. At length, when it seemed that the time for action was now come, he surrounded himself with a body of armed men and burst into the Forum. Then, amidst the general consternation which ensued, he seated himself on the throne in front of the Curia, and commanded, by the

mouth of a herald, that the senators should come to King Tarquinius at the senate-house. They at once assembled some of them already prepared beforehand, others afraid that they might be made to suffer for they were astounded for it if they did not come :

;

and wonderful sight, and supposed that Servius was utterly undone. Tarquinius then went back to the very beginning of Servius's family and abused the king for a slave and a slave-woman's son who, after the shameful death of his own father, Tarquinius Priscus, had seized the power there had been no observance of the interregnum, as on former occasions there had been no election held not by the votes of the people had sovereignty come to him,

at this strange

;

;

;

not with the confirmation of the Fathers, but by a woman's gift. Such having been his birth, and such his appointment to the kingship, he had been an abettor of the lowest class of society, to which he himself belonged, and his hatred of the nobility possessed by others had led him to plunder the leading citizens of their land and divide it amongst All the burdens which the dregs of the populace. had before been borne in common he had laid upon He had instituted the the nation's foremost men. census that he might hold up to envy the fortunes of the wealthy, and make them available, when he chose to draw upon them, for largesses to the destitute. 167

B.C.

678 ~

LIVY XLVIII. Huic

A.U.C.

oration! Servius

cum

intervenisset

trepido nuntio excitatus, extemplo a vestibule curiae

2

magna voce "Quid hoc," inquit, "Tarquini, rei est ? Qua tu audacia me vivo vocare ausus es patres aut in " Cum ille ferociter ad haec, sede considere mea ? patris sui tenere sedem, multo quam servum potiorem filium regis regni heredem, satis ilium diu per liceiitiam eludentem insultasse dominis, clamor

se

ab utriusque fautoribus

oritur,

et concursus populi

fiebat in curiam,

apparebatque regnaturum qui vicisTurn Tarquinius necessitate iam etiam ipsa cogente ultima audere, multo et aetate et viribus

3 set.

validior,

medium

arripit

Servium elatumque e curia

partem per gradus deiecit inde ad Fit fuga regis in curiam rediit. senatum cogendum ipse prope exsanguis apparitorum atque comitum in inferiorem

4

;

:

sine regio comitatu domum se reciperet ab iis, 1 missi ab Tarquinio fugientem consecuti erant qui 5 interficitur. Creditor, quia non abhorret a cetero

cum

admonitu Tulliae id factum. Carpento certe, quod satis constat, in forum invecta, nee reverita coetum virorum, evocavit virum e curia regemque scelere,

id

6

A quo facessere iussa ex tanto prima appellavit. se domum cum tumultu, reciperet pervenissetque ad summum Cyprium

vicum, ubi Diariium nuper

fuit,

1 cum sine regio comitatu domum se reciperet ab iis cum semianimis (or -mes) regio comitatu domum Alschefski ee reciperet pervenissetque ad summum cos primum :

vicum

168

fl.

BOOK XL VI

XLVIII.

I.

1-6

In the midst of this harangue Servius, the alarming news, came up and immediately called out in a loud voice from the vestibule of the Curia " What means Tar1 1.

who had been aroused by

:

quinius

?

this,

With what assurance have you dared, while

I live, to convene the Fathers or to sit in my chair?" Tarquinius answered truculently that it was his own father's seat he occupied that the king's son was a fitter successor to his kingdom than a slave was that ;

;

had long enough been suffered to mock his masters and insult them. Shouts arose from the partisans of each, and the people began to rusli into the senate-house it was clear that he would be king who won the day. Tarquinius was now compelled by sheer necessity to go on boldly to the end. Being much superior to Servius in youth and strength, he seized him by the middle, and bearing him out of the senate-house, flung him down the He then went back into the Curia to hold steps. the senate together. The king's servitors and companions fled. The king himself, half fainting, was making his way home without the royal attendants, when the men whom Tarquinius had sent in pursuit of the fugitive came up with him and killed him. It is believed, inasmuch as it is not inconsistent with the rest of her wickedness, that this deed was suggested by Tullia. It is agreed, at all events, that she was driven in her carriage into the Forum, and nothing abashed at the crowd of men, summoned her husband from the Curia and was the first to hail him king. Tarquinius bade her withdraw from so turbulent a scene. On her way home she had got to the top of the Vicus Cyprius, where the shrine of Diana recently stood, and was bidding her driver Tullius

;

169

B.O.

578 ~ 534

LIVY carpenLum dextra

flectenti

A.U.C.

in

Urbium cJivum

collem Esquiliarurn eveheretur, inhibuit frenos 7

dominae

is

trucidatum

inhumanumque inde locus

furiis

Foedum

ostendit.

traditur scelus,

Sceleratum

est

ut in

pavidus atque

qui iumenta agebat, iacentemque

Servium

agitantibus

restitit

monumentoque vicum vocant quo amens

sororis ac viri,

Tullia per patris

corpus carpentum egisse fertur, partemque sanguinis ac caedis paternae cruento vehiculo, contaminata 1 ipsa respersaque, tulisse ad penates suos virique sui, malo iratis regni principio similes propediem quibus

8

exitus sequerentur. Ser. Tullius regnavit

annos quattuor et quad-

raginta ita ut bono ctiam moderatoque succedenti regi

difficilis

aemulatio

esset.

Ceterum

id

quoque

ad gloriam accessit quod cum illo simul iusta ac legiId ipsum tam mite ac tarn 9 tima regna occiderunt. moderatum imperium tamen, quia unius esset, deponere eum in animo habuisse quidam auctores sunt, ni scelus intestinum liberandae patriae consilia agitanti

2

intervenisset.

XLIX. Inde

oi

A.U.C. 2-0--J44

2

L. Tarquinius regnare occepit, cui r

i-j

Superbo cognomen facta indiderunt, quia socerum gener sepultura prohibuit, Romulum quoque insepultum perisse dictitans, primoresque patrum, quos Servi

rebus

favisse

credebat,

interfecit

;

conscius

deinde male quaerendi regni ab se ipso adversus se

exemplum 1

2

170

capi posse, armatis corpus circumsaepsit

tulisse

flV

agitanti

7?j-

tulisset

:

:

fl.

agitanci

Ml

:

agitandi A.

;

BOOK

I.

XLVIII. 6-XLIX.

2

turn to the right into the Clivus Urbius, to take her to the Esquiliiie Hill, when the man gave a start of terror, and pulling up the reins pointed out to his mistress the prostrate form of the murdered Servius. Horrible and inhuman was the crime that is said to have ensued, which the place commemorates men for there, crazed by the call it the Street of Crime avenging spirits of her sister and her former husband, they say that Tullia drove her carriage over her father's corpse, and, herself contaminated and defiled, carried away on her vehicle some of her murdered father's blood to her own and her husband's penates, whose anger was the cause that the evil beginning of this reign was, at no long date, followed by a similar end. Servius Tullius had ruled forty-four years, so well that even a good and moderate successor would have found it hard to emulate him. But there was this to enhance his renown, that just and lawful kingship Yet, mild and moderate though perished with him. his sway was, some writers state that he had intended to resign it, as being a government by one man, had not the crime of one of his family interrupted his plans for the liberation of his country. XLIX. Now began the reign of Lucius Tarquinius, whose conduct procured him the surname of Superbus, For he denied the rites of sepulture or the Proud. to his

own

father-in-law, asserting that

also perished

without

Romulus had

He

put to death the he believed to have favoured

burial.

leading senators, whom the cause of Servius and, conscious that a precedent for gaining the kingship by crime might be found in his own career and turned against himself, he

171

B

c.

578 ~ 534

B.C.

LIV Y 7

A.U.C.

3

22vV244

neque enim ad ius regni quicquam praeter vim 1 T M habebat, ut qui neque populi mssu neque auctonbus Eo accedebat ut in caritate patribus regnaret. 1

4

civium nihil spei reponenti metu regnum tutandum

Quern ut pluribus incuteret, cognitiones capitalium rerum sine consiliis per se solus exercebat, 6 perque earn causam occidere, in exsilium agere, bonis multare poterat non suspectos modo aut invisos sed esset.

6

unde

sperare posset. Praeimminuto iiumero statuit nullos in cipue patrum patres legere, quo contemptior paucitate ipsa ordo nihil aliud

quam praedam

ita

minusque per se nihil agi indignarentur. Hie enim regum primus traditum l a prioribus morem de omnibus senatum consulendi solvit, domesticis consiliis rem publicam administravit bellum, pacem,

7 esset,

;

foedera, societates per se ipse, cum quibus voluit, 8 iniussu populi ac senatus, fecit diremitque. Latinorum sibi maxime gentem conciliabat, ut peregrinis

quoque opibus

tutior inter cives esset,

modo cum primoribus eorum, sed

neque hospitia quoque

adfinitates

Mamilio Tusculano is longe si famae credimus, ab ei Mamilio filiam nuptum dat perque eas nuptias multos sibi cognatos amicosque eius conciliat. Octavio

9 iungebat.

princeps Latini nominis erat, Ulixe deaque Circa oriundus

1

1

:

ut traditur n.

causes affecting the caput (which might mean either civic rights ") of the accused. Circe bore to Ulysses a son, Telegonus, who founded i.e.

" life "or " z

traditum Grynaeus 5-

Tusculum.

172

BOOK

I.

XLIX.

3-9

assumed a body-guard. He had indeed no right to the throne but might, since he was ruling neither by popular decree nor senatorial sanction. Moreover, as he put no trust in the affection of his people, he was compelled to safeguard his authority by fear.

To

inspire terror therefore in

many

persons,

he adopted the practice of trying capital causes l by himself, without advisers and, under the pretext thus afforded, was able to inflict death, exile, and forfeiture of property, not only upon persons whom he suspected and disliked, but also in cases where he could have nothing to gain but plunder. It was chiefly the senators whose numbers were reduced by this procedure, and Tarquinius determined to make no new appointments to the order, that it might be the more despised for its very paucity, and might chafe less at being ignored in all business of state. For this king was the first to break with the custom handed down by his predecessors, of consulting the senate on all occasions, and governed the nation without other advice than that of his own household. War, peace, treaties, and alliances were entered upon or broken off by the monarch himself, with whatever states he wished, and without the decree of people or senate. The Latin race he ;

particularly to make his friends, that his strength abroad might contribute to his security at home. He contracted with their nobles not only relations of hospitality but also matrimonial connecTo Octavius Mamilius of Tusculum, a man tions. by long odds the most important of the Latin name, and descended, if we may believe report, from Ulysses and the goddess Circe, 2 he gave his daughter in marriage, and in this way attached to himself the numerous kinsmen and friends of the man. 173

strove

B.C.

534 " 510

LIVY lam magna Tarquini auctoritas inter Latinorum cum in diem certam ut ad lucum

L.

A.U.C.

220-244

-

.

proceres erat,

Ferentinae conveniant indicit 2

communibus

rebus

prima luce

:

esse quae agere de Conveniunt frequentes

velit.

diem quidem

ipse Tarquinius

sed paulo ante

quam

:

servavit,

Multa

sol occideret venit.

ibi

toto die in concilio variis iactata sermonibus erant. 3

Turnus Herdonius ab Aricia ferociter

in

absentem

baud mirum esse Superbo inditum Romae cognomen iam enim ita clam quidem mussitantes, volgo tamen eum appellabant. Tarquinium erat invectus

An quicquam superbius 4

nomen Latinum ?

:

esse

Principibus longe

ipsum qui concilium

citis,

ab

non

adesse.

si

Temptari profecto patientiam iugum accepeCui enim non apparere adrint, obnoxios premat. fectare eum imperium in Latinos ? Quod si sui bene crediderint cives, aut parricidio

6

l

indixerit ut,

5

omne domo ex-

ludificari sic

quam

sit,

creditum

si

illud et

credere et Latinos,

quidem alienigenae, debere

2 ;

non raptum

quamquam ne

sic

sin suos eius paeniteat,

quippe qui alii super alios trucidentur, exsulatum eant, bona amittant, quid spei melioris Latinis portendi

abituros, 7

quam 1

domum suam quemque

Si se audiant,

?

neque magis

observaturos diem

ipse qui indixerit observet.

Principibus (principibui 0) longe

longe

174

M.

a

debere

M

:

H

:

inde

concilii

Haec atque

alia

principibus enim U:

deberet (or -ent) n.

BOOK

I.

L.

1-7

Tarquinius had already won great influence the Latin nobles, when he gave notice that they should assemble on a certain day at the grove of Ferentina, saying that there were matters of L.

with

common

interest

which he wished to

discuss.

The

Latins gathered at daybreak in large numbers ; Tarquinius himself, though he did indeed keep the day, arrived but a little while before sundown. There had been much talk in the council all day about various subjects. Turnus Herdonius of Aricia had

inveighed violently against the absent Tarquinius. He said it was no wonder he had been given the name of Superbus at Rome for that was the name

by which they already called him, secretly and in could anything whispers, but still quite generally be more overbearing than to flout the whole Latin race as he was doing then ? Their leaders had been summoned from distant homes, and the very man who had called the council was not there. He was evi;

dently trying their patience, intending, if they submitted to the yoke, to use them as his vassals. For who could fail to see that he was aiming at sovereignty over the Latins ? If his own people had done well to intrust this to him, if indeed it had been intrusted to him at all, and had not been ravished by foul murder, then it was right that the Latins also should intrust it to him nav, not even then, for he was of foreign birth but if his own subjects were weary ol /

*

;

him, as men who, one after another, were being made to suffer death, exile, confiscation, what better prospect was held out to the Latins? If they were guided

by the speaker they would depart every man to his own home, nor observe the day of meeting more than he who had proclaimed it was observing it. As these 175

B.C.

534 ~ 510

LIVY eodem

A.U.C. 2-20-244

pertinentia seditiosus facinerosusque

bisque artibus

8 reret, intervenit

aversi

monitus a proximis ut purgaret venisset,

temporis inter

patrem et

disse-

Is finis orationi fuit

Tarquinius.

omnes ad Tarquinium salutandum.

tio facto

homo

opes domi nactus cum maxime

disceptatorem

ait

Qui

quod

se,

se

;

silen-

id

sumptum

filium, cura reconciliandi eos in gra-

tiam moratum esse, et quia ea res exemisset ilium 9 diem, postero die

acturum quae

Ne

constituisset.

quidem ab Turno tulisse taciturn ferunt dixisse enim nullam breviorem esse cognitionem quam inter

id

;

patrem et

filium,

pareat patri, LI.

paucisque transigi verbis posse

habiturum infortunium

Haec Aricinus

ex concilio

abiit.

in

:

ni

esse.

regem Romanum increpans

Quam

rern Tarquinius aliquanto

quam videbatur aegrius ferens confestim Turno necem machinatur, ut eundem terrorem quo civium 2

animos domi oppresserat Latinis pro imperio palam

interfici

non

Aricinos servum Turni auro corrupit, ut in 1

deversorium eius vim 3 sineret.

Et quia

poterat, oblato falso

Per adversae factionis

crimine insontem oppressit.

quosdam

iniceret.

magnam

Ea cum una nocte

gladiorum

iiiferri

clam

perfecta essent, Tar-

quinius paulo ante lucem accitis ad se principibus 1

I 7

6

ut in

HWAld.:

in (ten 0} n.

BOOK

I.

L. 7-Li.

3

words and others of the same import were being uttered by the factious and turbulent Latin, who to these qualities his influence amongst his own This was the end of people, Tarquinius came up. the speech all turned to salute Tarquinius. Silence was commanded, and the king, being advised by those nearest him to excuse himself for having come so late, declared that he had been chosen arbiter between a father and his son, and had been delayed by his anxiety to reconcile them. He added that since this business had used up that day, he would take up on the morrow the matters which he had meant to bring before them. They say that Turnus would not suffer even this to go unchallenged, asserting that there was no question more quickly settled than one betwixt father and son, for these

owed

;

" Unless few words were enough to end it you father it will be the worse for obey your you." LI. Girding thus against the Roman king, the Arician quitted the council. Tarquinius was considerably more vexed than he appeared to be, and at once looked about him for the means of destroying Turnus, that he might inspire in the Latins the same terror with which he had broken the spirit of the Romans. And since he could not openly put his man to death by virtue of sovereign right, he charged him with a crime of which he was innocent, and so :

destroyed him. Through the agency of certain men of the opposite party in Aricia, he bribed a slave of Turnus with gold to allow a large quantity of swords to be brought secretly into his master's lodging. Having accomplished this in a single night, Tarquinius, shortly before dawn, summoned the chief men of the Latins to his quarters, pretending to 177

c 5 34-5io

LIVY Latinorum quasi re nova perturbatus. moram suam

A.U.C.

220-244

hesternam, velut deorum quadam providentia inla4 tarn, ait saluti sibi sibi

atque

Ab Turno

fuisse.

illis

necem ut

et primoribus

norum

solus

populorum parari imperium teneat. Adgressurum

hesterno die in concilio

maxime

peteret.

illam absentis insectationem esse natam,

Non

dubitare,

ventum

rantur, quin prima luce, ubi sit,

instructus

6 venturus

sit.

templo 7

Turnum

Inde

quod mo-

si

vera defe-

in

concilium

cum coniuratorum manu armatusque Dici gladiorum ingentem esse

rum ad eum convectum. sciri

fuisse

dilatam rem esse, quod

;

5 auctor concilii afuerit, quern

rando spem destituerit.

dici

Lati-

vanum 1 necne

Rogare eos ut inde

posse.

veniant.

Id

fecit

Suspectam

rem

et

numesit

ex-

secum ad ingenium

Turni ferox et oratio hesterna et mora Tarquini,

quod videbatur ob earn

differri

caedes potuisse.

Eunt

quidem ad credendum animis, tamen nisi Ubi gladiis deprehensis cetera vana existimaturi. est eo ventum, Turnum ex somno excitatum circum-

inclinatis 8

sistunt custodes

comprehensisque servis, qui caritate domini vim parabant, cum gladii abditi ex omnibus locis deverticuli protraherentur, enimvero manifesta 1

I

78

;

vanum n

:

uarum

R

:

ucrum R*L.

BOOK

I.

LI.

3-8

have received alarming news, and informed them that his tardiness on the preceding day, as though somehow providentially occasioned, had been the means of saving himself and them. For he was told that Turnus was plotting his murder and that of the chief men of the different cities, that he might be sole ruler over the Latins. He would have attacked them the day before in the council, but had postponed the attempt because the summoner of the council, whom he chiefly aimed at, was not there. That was the reason Turnus had railed at him in his absence, for his delay had balked the Arician's expectation. Tarquinius said that he had no doubt, if his information was true, that Turnus would come at dawn, when they had assembled in the council, and would be armed and attended by a band of conspiIt was said that a great quantity of swords rators. had been carried to his lodging; the falsity or truth of this could be ascertained immediately, and he asked them to go with him to Turnus's quarters. The charge was made plausible both by the aggressive spirit of Turnus and his speech of the day before, and by Tarquinius's delay, since it seemed that the massacre might have been postponed on that account. The nobles went therefore with a disposition to believe the story, but still, if the swords should not be found, they were prepared to conclude

the other charges false. As soon as they reached the place they w akened Turnus from his sleep and surrounded him with guards and having overpowered the slaves, who out of affection for their master would have resorted to force, they proceeded to pull out the hidden swords from every corner of the inn. There was now no doubt that Turnus was r

;

179

B.C.

34 ~ 510

LIVY A-u c .

res visa, iniectaeque

.

9

Turno catenae

;

et confestim

Latinorum concilium magno cum tumultu advocatur. Ibi tarn atrox invidia orta est gladiis in medio positis ut indicta causa, novo gen ere leti, deiectus ad caput aquae Ferentinae crate superne iniecta saxisque congestis mergeretur. LI I. Revocatis deinde ad concilium Latinis Tarquinius conlaudatisque qui Turnum novantem res pro manifesto parricidio merita poena adfecissent,

verba fecit

2 ita

:

posse

se

quidem

vetusto

iure

quod, cum omnes Latini ab Alba oriundi eo foedere l teneantur quo 2 ab Tullo res omnis

agere, sint,

3

Albana cum coloniis 3 imperium ceterum se

suis

in

Romanum

cesserit

magis omnium

utilitatis id

;

causa censere ut renovetur id foedus, secundaque potius fortuna populi Romani ut participes Latini

quam urbium excidia vastationesque agroquas Anco prius, patre deinde suo regnante perpessi sint, semper aut exspectent aut patiantur.

fruantur rum,,

4

Hand

difficulter

persuasum Latinis, quamquam

in eo

foedere superior Romana res erat ceterum et capita nominis Latini stare ac sentire cum rege videbant, et ;

sui 5

4

cuique periculi,

documentum.

Ita

si

adversatus esset, recens erat

renovatum foedus indictumque

1

eo foedere Pcrizonius

2

quo f

4

siii

M

:

':

quod n. Turnus

:

*

sui

in eo foedere n. coloniis 5colonis n. :

ft.

1 In the account of this treaty at xxiv. 3 no Alban colonies are mentioned, nor do we know of any. Conway and Walters, therefore, keep colonis of the MSS., but we should rather expect civibus in this context.

180

BOOK caught in the

I.

LI. 8-Lii. 5

and he was

cast into chains, while instantly sent out, amidst intense excitement, for a council of the Latins. There such bitter resentment was aroused by the public display of the swords, that the accused was not permitted to plead his cause, but suffered a new kind of death, being plunged into the source of the Ferentine Water and sunk beneath a wicker crate heaped up with

the

act,

summons was

stones.

LII.

Tarquinius

then

called

the

Latins again

and praised them for the punishment which they had justly meted out to the rebellious attempt of Turnus, in view of the treason in which he had just been taken. The king then went on to say that it was in his power to proceed according to an ancient right, since all the Latins, having sprung from Alba, were included in that treaty by which, from the time of Tullus, the whole Alban state, with its colonies, had come under Rome's dominion. 1 But the advantage of all would be better served, he thought, if that treaty were renewed and the good fortune of the Roman people w ere thrown open to the participation of the Latins, than if they were always to be dreading or enduring the razing of their cities and the devastation of their lands which they had suffered first in Ancus's reign and afterward in that of the speaker's father. It was to the place of council,

r

not

to persuade the Latins, although the interest preponderated in this treaty. For the rest, they saw that the chiefs of the Latin name stood with the king and took his view of the matter, and they had just been given a demonstration of the difficult

Roman

danger they would each incur if they opposed the So the treaty was renewed, and the Latin project. 181

B.C.

534

~

LIVY Latinorum ut ex foedere die certa ad lucum Ferentinae armati frequentes adessent. Qui ubi ad edictum Roman! regis ex omnibus populis convenere, ne ducem suum neve secretum imperium iunioribus

A.U.C.

220-244

6

propriave signa haberent, miscuit manipulos ex Latinis Romanisque ut ex binis singulos faceret binosque ex singulis ; ita geminatis manipulis centuriones imposuit. LIII. Nee ut iniustus in pace rex, ita dux belli pravus fuit quin ea arte aequasset superiores reges, ;

degeneratum in aliis huic quoque decori offecisset. Is primus Volscis bellum in ducentos amplius post suam aetatem annos movit. Suessamque Pometiam Ubi cum divendita l praeda quadex iis vi cepit. 2 talenta raginta argenti refecisset, concepit animo ni

2

3

earn amplitudiiiem

hominumque etiam

loci

templi quae digna

Romano

maiestate esset.

aedificationem 4

lovis

rege, quae eilis

Captivam pecuniam

in

templi seposuit.

eum

Excepit deinde

deum

imperio, quae ipsius

8

lentius

spe bellum, quo Gabios, propinquam urbem, nequiquam vi adortus, cum obsidendi quoque urbem spes pulso a moenibus

adempta 1 a

esset,

divendita

$-

:

postremo minime arte Romana, fraude

(or r. ac recepisset) or cepisset) fl.

M

dividenda n. mary.: refecisset coepisset reque cepisset (or reccepisset deinde eum fl deinde M.

dividenta

refecisset Gronov.

P

1

MRDL 3

A Roman

:

P

or

2

:

:

maniple was divided into halves, and each was combined with the half of a Latin maniple, similarly The maniples were not, divided, to form a new unit. 1

half

strictly speaking, doubled.

182

BOOK

I.

LI i.

5-LMi. 4

juniors were commanded to present themselves at the grove of Ferentina on a certain day, armed and in full force, as the treaty prescribed. When they had assembled, agreeably to the king's edict, from the different districts, Tarquinius was unwilling that they should have their own leaders, or a separate he therefore command, or their own standards ;

mingled Latins and Romans in the maniples, making one maniple of two and two of one, and over the 1 maniples thus doubled he put centurions. LI 1 1. But if the king was unjust in peace, yet he was not a bad general in war. Indeed, he would have equalled in this art the kings who had gone before him, if his degeneracy in other things had not also dimmed his glory here. It was he who began the war with the Volsci which was to last more than two hundred years after his time, and took Suessa Pometia from them by storm. There, having sold oft the booty and raised forty talents of silver, 2 he conceived the project of a temple of Jupiter so magnificent that it should be worthy of the king of gods and men, the Roman empire, and the majesty of the The money from the captured city he site itself. put aside to build this temple. He then engaged in an unexpectedly tedious war with Gabii, a neighbouring town. After first assaulting the place in vain, he laid siege to it, but this attempt was as unsuccessful as the other, for and he finally he was driven off from the walls resorted to the policy, so unlike a Roman, of deceit ;

2 As Livy gives the sum in talents, it has been suggested that he may here be following Fabius Pictor, whose history was written in Greek. The Euboic talent was worth roughly 220 or $1,060.

B.C.

534 ~ 5!C

LIVY v.u.c.

5 ac dolo, adgressus est.

Nam cum

velut posito bello

220-244

fundamentis templi iaciendis

l

aliisque urbanis operi-

bus intentum se esse simularet, Sextus films eius, qui minimus ex tribus erat, transfugit ex composite

Gabios, patris in se saevitiam intolerabilem conque6 rens

:

iam ab

alienis in suos vertisse

liberorum quoque

eum

superbiam, et

frequentiae taedere, ut

domi quoque ne heredem quern regni quam stirpem, in curia solitudinem fecerit

7

tutum

sibi

credidisse.

Nam

sit,

et

nihil

apud hostes L. Tarquini ne errarent, manere iis bellum quod nisi

positum simuletur, et per occasionem invasurum.

ne

relinquat.

Se quidem inter tela et gladios patris elapsum

usquam

8

quam

faciat,

Quod

si

se

eum

incautos

apud eos supplicibus locus

non

omne Latium, Volscosque inde 2

pererraturum et Hernicos petiturum, donee ad eos per-

Aequos

veniat qui a patrtim crudelibus atque impiis suppli9 ciis

tegere liberos sciant.

Forsitan

etiam ardoris

aliquid ad bellum armaque se ad versus superbissimum regem ac ferocissimum populum inventurum. 10

Cum,

si

abiturus

nihil

si,

ad ultimum 1

2

184

ira

porro inde

videretur, benigne ab Gabinis excipitur.

Vetant mirari 11 talis

morarentur, infensus

qualis in cives, qualis in socios, in liberos esset

iaciendis Vacosanus $ inde Gronov.: se inde

:

;

in se

ipsum post-

faciendis A. fl.

BOOK

I.

LIII.

4-n

For he pretended to have given up trickery. the war and to be engros? ed in laying the foundations of his temple and in c)ther city works, arranging meanwhile to let Sextus, wP was the youngest of his three sons, desert to Gabii- and there complain that

and

Hi8 father's was intolerably c ruel to him diverted from strangers said, was now en his children were too upon his own family. Ev many to please him, and t he solitude which he had caused in the senate-housP he wj shed to bring to that ne might leave no pass in his own home also, s descendant, no heir to hi kingdom. The young man said that he had him? elf escaped from amidst the swords and javelins of l lis father, and had made s no safety for him anyup his mind that there wa where save with the enem ies of Lucius Tarquinius. Let them not delude theri186 ^ 68 , he said the war which the king pretended to have abandoned was still awaiting them, and V hen the chance offered But if they ha d he would attack them U n^ wares no room for suppliants, he was prepared to wander se ek out the Volsci and all over Latium, and thenc the Aequi and the Hernio^ till a* la st he should his father

pride,

-

he

J

-

w how

to

a

son to people who kne protect from the cruel and wicked tortures inflicted on him ht even discover some by a father. Possibly he n"g enthusiasm for war and arnls a ga inst the haughtiest When of kings and the most insP lent of nations. ere indifferent he would it appeared that if they w leave them in anger and continue his flight, the Gabini bade him welcome. The y told him not to be surprised if the king h ad been the same to his children that he had beer1 to his subjects, to his his cruelty upon allies; he would end by Venting

come

185

B .c. 634-

LIVY remo saeviturum,

A.U.C.

220-244

adventum illo

eius

si

esse,

Sibi vero

alia desint.

gratum

futurumque credere brevi ut

adiuvante a portis Gabinis sub

Romana moenia

bellum transferatur.

LIV.

Inde

cum de

in

consilia

publica

rebus adsentiri

aliis

diceret, quibus eae notiores essent, ipse belli

auctor esse

dentiam

et

adsumere,

in

l

eo

quod

sibi

Ubi

adhiberi.

veteribus

se

Gabinis

identidem

praecipuam pru-

utriusque

vires

populi

nosset sciretque invisam profecto superbiam regiam

quam ferre ne liberi quidem potuiscum sensim ad rebellandum primores Gabinorum incitaret, ipse cum promptissimis iuvecivibus esse, Ita

2 sent.

num praedatum 3

atque in expeditiones

iret, et dictis

factisque omnibus ad fallendum instructis vana adcresceret fides, dux ad ultimum belli legitur. Ibi

cum inter

inscia multitudine quid ageretur proelia parva

Romam

Gabina

Gabiosque

fierent,

quibus plerumque

res superior esset, turn certatim

summi

infi-

mique Gabinorum Sex. Tarquinium dono deum sibi 4 missum ducem credere. Apud milites vero obeundo pericula ac labores pariter,

endo, tanta caritate esse

praedam munifice

esse et in Alschefski 1 86

largi-

ut non pater Tarquinius :

esset in

fl.

BOOK himself

I.

LIII.

II-LIV. 4

other objects failed him. But for their said, they were glad of his coming, and they believed that in a short time, with his help, the seat of war would be shifted from the gates of Gabii to the walls of Rome. LIV. Sextus next obtained admission to the Gabian councils of state, where, on all subjects but one, he professed a deference for the opinion of those who had long been citizens of Gabii and were better acquainted with the facts. War, however, he did take it upon himself to urge, again and again and in so doing he assumed a special competence, as one who was acquainted with the strength of both nations, and knew that the king's pride must necessarily be hateful to all the citizens, since even his children had not been able to put up with it. In this way, little by little, he stirred up the leaders of the Gabini to reopen the war. He would himself take the boldest of the young men and go upon raids and forays. All his words and acts were calculated to deceive, and their ill-grounded confidence so increased that in the end he was chosen commander-in-chief. The war began, and the people had no suspicion of what was going forward. Skirmishes took place

own

if

they

part,

;

between Rome and Gabii, in which, as a rule, the Gabini had the best of it. Thereupon their citizens, both high and low, contended who should be loudest in expressing the belief that in Sextus Tarquinius they had a heaven-sent leader. And the soldiers, seeing him ever ready to share in their dangers and hardships, and ever lavish in distributing the plunder, came to love him so devotedly that the elder Tarquinius was not more truly master 187

B.C.

534-510

LIVY A.U.C.

Romae quam

6 potentior

220-244

filius Gabiis esset. Itaque , virium conlectum ad omnes conatus ,

satis

postquam

videbat, turn ex suis ununi sciscitatum mittit

patrem

dem

quidnam

ut omnia unus publice Gabiis

Huic nuntio

6 dedissent.

Romam

ad

se facere vellet, quandoqui1

posset

ei

di

quia, credo, dubiae fidei

videbatur, nihil voce responsum est; rex velut deliberabundus in hortum aedium transit sequente nuntio

filii

;

ibi

inambulans tacitus

summa papaverum

baculo decussisse.

Interrogando exnuntius fessus, ut re imperspectandoque responsum dixerit Gabios redit fecta, ipse quaeque viderit quae

7 capita dicitur

;

refert 8

:

nullam

seu

seu odio, seu superbia insita ingenio vocem emisisse. Sexto ubi quid vellet

ira,

eum

parens quidve praeciperet tacitis ambagibus patuit, primores civitatis criminando alios apud populum, 9 alios sua ipsos invidia

opportunos interemit.

erat futura, clam interfecti.

Patuit quibusdam volen-

tibus fuga, aut in exsilium acti sunt, 10

bona iuxta atque interemptorum gitiones inde praedaeque

Multi

minus speciosa criminatio

palam, quidam, in quibus

absentiumque

divisui fuere.

Lar-

et dulcedine privati corn-

;

modi sensus malorum publicorum adimi, donee orba consilio auxilioque Gabina res regi Romano sine ulla dimicatione in

manum

traditur.

P (or p or prae) Gabiis publice Gabiis Heerwugtn populis Gabinis facere U. p. Gabinis 1

:

PBFO

1

88

:

ft

:

BOOK

I.

LIV.

4-10

And so, when in Rome than was his son in Gabii. Sextus saw that he had acquired strength enough for any enterprise, he despatched one of his own followers to his father in Rome, to ask what the king might please to have him do, since the gods had granted that at Gabii all power in the state should rest with him alone. To this messenger, I suppose because he seemed not quite to be trusted, no verbal reply was given. The king, as if absorbed in meditation, passed into the garden of his house, followed by his son's envoy. There, walking up and down without a word, he is said to have struck off the heads of the tallest poppies with his stick. Tired of asking questions and waiting for an answer, the messenger returned to Gabii, his mission, as he thought, unaccomplished. He reported what he had Whether from said himself and what he had seen. anger, or hatred, or native pride, the king, he said, had not pronounced a single word. As soon as it was clear to Sextus what his father meant and what was the purport of his silent hints, he rid himself of the chief men of the state. Some he accused before the people against others he took advantage of the odium they had themselves incurred. Many were some, whom it would not have openly executed looked well to accuse, were put to death in secret. Some were permitted, if they chose, to leave the country or they were driven into banishment, and once out of the way, their property was forfeited, just as in the case of those who had been put to ;

;

;

death.

Thence came

largesses

and

spoils,

and

in

the sweetness of private gain men lost their feeling for the wrongs of the nation, until, deprived of counsel and aid, the state of Gabii was handed over unresisting to the Roman king. 189 VOL.

I.

H

B.C.

634~ 51C

LIVY LV. Gabiis receptis Tarqninius pacem cum AequoX

A.TJ.C.

220-244

rum gente

fecit,

foedus

cum

Tuscis renovavit.

ad negotia urbana animum convertit

primum

ut lovis

mentum regni 2 reges

templum

sui

in

quorum erat monte Tarpeio monu;

nominisque relinqueret: Tarquinios

ambos patrem

vovisse, filium perfecisse.

libera a ceteris religionibus area esset tota lovis

plique

eius

sacellaque

primum

quod statuit,

inaedificaretur,

quae aliquot

Et ut tem-

exaugurare fana a Tatio

ibi,

in ipso discrimine adversus

3 vota, consecrata

Inde

rege

Romulum pugnae

inaugurataque postea fuerant.

principia condendi huius operis movisse

Inter

numen ad

indicandam tanti imperil molem traditur deos.

Nam

cum omnium

sacellorum exaugurationes admitterent 4 aves, in Termini fano non addixere idque omen ;

auguriumque ita acceptum est, non motam Termini sedem unumque eum deorum non evocatum sacratis 6 sibi finibus firma stabiliaque cuncta portendere.

Hoc

perpetuitatis auspicio accepto secutum aliud magni-

tudinem imperii portendens prodigium

humanum 6

integra

facie

aperientibus

est

:

caput

fundamenta

Quae visa species haud earn arcem imperii caputque rerum fore ambages per templi dicitur apparuisse.

portendebat, idque

ita

cecinere vates, quique in urbe

1 So Propertius calls the Capitoline i.e. the Capitoline. Jupiter "Tarpeius Pater" (iv. i. 7).

190

BOOK

I.

LV.

1-6

LV. Having got possession of Gabii, Tarquinius nation and renewed

made peace with the Aequian

the treaty with the Etruscans. He next turned his attention to affairs in the city. Here his first concern was to build a temple of Jupiter on the Tarpeian Mount l to stand as a memorial of his reign and of his name, testifying that of the two Tarquinii, both kings, the father had made the vow and the son had fulfilled it. And that the site might be free from all other religious claims and belong wholly to Jupiter and his temple, which was building there, he determined to annul the consecration of several fanes and shrines which had been first vowed by King Tatius at the crisis of the battle against Romulus, and had afterwards been consecrated and inaugurated. At the very time when he began this task the gods are said to have exerted their power to show the magnitude of this mighty empire. For whereas the birds permitted that the consecrations of all the other shrines should be rescinded, they refused their consent for the shrine of Terminus. This omen and augury was thus construed the fact that the seat of Terminus was not moved, and that of all the gods he alone was not called away from the place consecrated to him, meant that the whole kingdom would be firm and steadfast. When this auspice of permanence had been received, there followed another prodigy foretelling the grandeur of their empire. A human head, its features intact, was found, so it is said, by the men who were digging for the foundations of the temple. This appearance plainly foreshowed that here was to be the citadel of the empire and the head of the world, and such was the interpretation of the soothsayers, both those who were in :

191

B.C.

LIVY erant quosque ad earn

A.U.C:.

220-244

rem consultandam ex Etruria .

Augebatur ad impensas regis animus. l Itaque Pometinae manubiae, quae perducendo ad destinatae culmen operi erant, vix in fundamenta

7 acciverant.

8

Eo magis Fabio, praeterquam quod suppeditavere. antiquior est, crediderim quadraginta ea sola talenta

9 fuisse,

quam

Pisoni,

quadraginta

qui

argenti seposita in earn

rem

scribit,

niilia

summam 2

pondo pecu-

niae neque ex unius turn urbis praeda sperandam et

ne horum quidem 3 operum fundamenta non exsuperaturam. LVI. Intentus perficiendo templo fabris undique ex Etruria accitis non pecunia solum ad id publica est usus, sed operis etiam ex plebe. Qui cum haud parvus et ipse militiae adderetur labor, minus iiullius

tamen plebs gravabatur 2 ficare

manibus

suis

quam

templa deum exaedipostquam et ad alia ut

se 4

aliquanto maioris tradu-

specie minora, sic laboris

cebantur opera, foros in circo faciendos cloacamque maximam, receptaculum omnium purgamentorum urbis, sub terra agendam quibus duobus operibus ;

nova haec magnificentia quicquam adaequare His laboribus exercita plebe, quia et urbi potuit.

vix 3

multitndinem, ubi usus non esset, oneri rebatur esse, et colonis mittendis occupari latius imperii fines vole1 Pometinae D z Sabellicus (cf. liii. 2): Pomptinae (or Promptinae or Pontinae) n. 2

summam

Glareanus

:

quia

summam n

:

quippe summarn

Bekker. 3

n

After quidem

have magnificentiae

expelled as a gloss from 4

192

quam

Bekker

:

(-a

M), ivhich Frigell

Ivi. 2.

quae (quern

:

que D)

fl.

BOOK

I.

LV. 6-Lvr. 3

the City and those who were called in from Etruria This made the king all the to consider the matter.

more ready the

to

Pometian

spend money on the work. Hence which had been destined to

spoils,

carry the building up to the roof, barely sufficed for the foundations. This disposes me to believe the statement of Fabius (who is, besides, the earlier writer) that the spoils were only forty talents, rather than Piso's, who writes that forty thousand pounds of silver were put aside for this work. So great a sum of money could not be expected from the booty of a single city of that time, and there is no building, even among those of our own day, for the foundations of which it would not be more than enough. LVI. Being intent upon completing the temple, the king called in workmen from every quarter of Etruria, and used for this purpose not only the state funds but labourers drawn from the commons. This work

was far from light in itself, and was added to their Yet the plebeians felt less abused military service. at having to build with their own hands the temples of the gods, than they did when they came to be transferred to other tasks also^ which, while less in show, were yet rather more laborious. I mean the erection of seats in the circus, and the construction underground of the Great Sewer, as a receptacle for the offscourings of the City, two works for which the new splendour of these days has scarcely been able to produce a match. After making the plebeians toil at these hard tasks, the king felt that a populace which had now no work to do was only a burden he wished, moreover, by sending out to the City settlers, to extend the frontiers of his dominions. all

;

'93

B.C.

LIVY bat.

x.a.c.

220-244

.

Signiam Circeiosque

colonos

praesidia

misit,

f urbi lutura terra

4

.

manque. Haec agenti portentum terribile visum anguis ex columna lignea elapsus cum terrorem fugamque in l fecisset, ipsius regis non tarn subito pavore regia :

quam anxiis implevit curis. Itaque publica prodigia Etrusci tantum vates adhiberentur, hoc velut domestico exterritus visu Del-

5 perculit pectus,

cum ad

phos ad maxime inclitum in terris oraculum mittere neque responsa sortium ulli alii committere

6 statuit

;

ausus duos

filios per ignotas ea tempestate terras, maria in Graeciam misit. Titus et Arruns Comes iis additus L. lunius Brutus Tarprofecti. 2 sorore regis natus, iuvenis longe alius ingenii, quinia quam cuius simulationem induerat. Is cum primores civitatis, in quibus fratrem suum, ab avunculo inter-

7 ignotiora

fectum audisset, neque in animo suo quicquam regi in fortuna concupiscendum relin-

timendum neque

contemptuque tutus esse ubi in iure parum praesidii esset. Ergo ex industria factus ad

quere 8

statuit,

imitationem

stultitiae,

regi sineret, Bruti sub eius obtentu 9

Romani animus

cum

se suaque praedae esse

quoque baud abnuit cognomen, ut cognominis liberator

latens opperiretur

ille

tempera

populi

sua.

3

Is

ab Tarquiniis ductus Delphos, ludibrium verius quam comes, aureum baculum inclusum corneo cavato turn

1 3

D

? regia Bauer regiam H. ingenii Madvig ingenio n. :

:

1

194

8

turn D$-

Literally "Dullard."

:

cum

fl.

BOOK

LVI.

1.

3-9

He therefore sent colonists to Sigma and Circei, to safeguard the City by land and sea. While he was thus occupied, a terrible portent A snake glided out of a wooden pillar, appeared. As for causing fright and commotion in the palace. the king himself, his heart was not so much struck with sudden terror as filled with anxious forebodings. Now for public prodigies none but Etruscan soothsayers were wont to be employed, but this domestic apparition, as he regarded it, so thoroughly alarmed him that he determined to send to Delphi, the most famous oracle in the world and, not daring to trust the oracle's reply to anybody else, he sent two of his ;

through strange lands, as they were then, and over stranger seas, to Greece. Titus and Arruns were the ones who went and, to bear them company, Lucius Junius Brutus was sent too, the son of Tarquinia, sister of the king, a young man of a very different mind from that which he pretended to bear. Having heard that the leading men of the state, and sons,

;

own brother, had been put to death he determined to leave nothing in his disposition which the king might justly fear, nor anything in his fortune to covet, resolving to find safety in contempt, where justice afforded no He therefore deliberately assumed the protection. appearance of stupidity, and permitted himself and his property to become the spoil of the king; he even accepted the surname Brutus, 1 that behind the screen afforded by this title the great soul which was to free the Roman People might bide its time unseen. He it was who was then taken by the Tarquinii to Delphi, more as a butt than as a comrade and he is said to have carried a golden staff inclosed within one among them by

his

his uncle,

;

195

B.C.

LIVY ad

A.U.C.

id

baculo tulisse

donum

Apollini dicitur, per

am-

220-244

10

Quo postquam ventum bages effigiem ingenii sui. est, perfectis patris mandatis cupido incessit animos iuvenum sciscitandi, ad quern eorum regnum Ro-

manum esset venturum. Ex infimo specu vocem redditam ferunt, " Imperium summum Romae habebit, qui vestrum primus, o iuvenes, osculum matri 11 tulerit."

Tarquinii, ut

1

Sextus, qui

Romae

relictus

expersque imperii esset, rem summa ope taceri iubent ipsi inter se uter prior, cum Romam redisset, matri osculum daret, sorti per-

fuerat, ignarus responsi

;

12 mittunt.

velut

si

scilicet

13 esset.

bellum

Brutus

alio ratus spectare

Pythicam vocem

prolapsus cecidisset terrain osculo contigit,

quod ea communis mater omnium mortalium Reditum inde Romam, ubi adversus Rutulos

summa

vi

parabatur.

LVII. Ardeam Rutuli habebant, gens ut in ea Earegione atque in ea aetate divitiis praepollens.

que ipsa causa 2

belli fuit,

quod rex Romanus cum

ipse

ditari, exhaustus magnificentia publicorum operum, turn praeda delenire popularium animos studebat,

praeter aliam superbiam regno infestos etiam quod se in fabrorum ministeriis ac servili tarn diu habitos 3 opere ab rege indigiiabantur.

primo impetu capi Ardea 1

196

Tarquinii, ut

j-

:

Temptata res est si Ubi id parum proposset.

Tarquinius

n

:

Tarquinius

SEX

0.

BOOK

I.

LVI.

9-Lvn. 3

of cornel wood, hollowed out to receive it, as a gift to Apollo, and a roundabout indication of his own character. When they came there, and had carried out their father's instructions, a desire sprang up in the hearts of the youths to find out which one of them should be king at Rome. From the depths of " The the cavern this answer, they say, was returned highest power at Rome shall be his, young men, who :

shall be first among The you to kiss his mother." Tarquinii, anxious that Sextus, who had been left in Rome, might know nothing of the answer and have

no share in the rule, gave orders that the incident should be kept strictly secret as between themselves, they decided by lot which should be first, upon their return to Rome, to give their mother a kiss. Brutus thought the Pythian utterance had another meaning ;

;

pretending to stumble, he fell and touched his lips to Earth, evidently regarding her as the common mother of all mortals. They then returned to Rome, where preparations for war with the Rutuli were being pushed with the greatest vigour. LVII. Ardea belonged to the Rutuli, who were a nation of

for that place and was the cause of the war, since the Roman king was eager not only to enrich himself, impoverished as he was by the splendour of his public works, but also to appease with booty the feeling of the common people who, besides the enmity they bore the monarch for other acts of pride, were especially resentful that the king should have kept them employed so long as artisans and doing the work of slaves. An attempt was made to capture Ardea by

commanding wealth,

period. This very fact

;

assault.

Having

failed in this, the

Romans invested 197

B.C.

534 ~ 610

LIVY A.U.C.

obsidione munitionibusque coepti premi hostes.

cessit,

220-244

4

In his

stativis,

satis liberi

5

quam

ut

fit

longo magis

quam

acri bello,

commeatus

militibus

erant, primoribus tamen magis regii quidem iuvenes interdum

;

otium conviviis comisationibusque inter se terebant. 6

Forte potantibus his apud Sex. Tarquinium, ubi et Collatinus cenabat Tarquinius Egerii

uxoribus mentio 7

de

incidit

miris modis.

Inde certamine accenso Collatinus negat verbis opus esse,

paucis id

quidem

horis posse

ceteris praestet Lucretia sua.

tae

iiiest,

sit

"

sciri,

Quin,

si

quantum

vigor iuven-

conscendimus equos invisimusque prae-

sentes nostrarum ingenia 8

filius,

suam quisque laudare

;

quod necopinato

Incaluerant

l

vino;

viri

Id cuique spectatissimum

?

adventu occurrerit oculis."

"Age

sane!'

omnes

;

citatis

Quo cum primis se intenequis avolant Romam. 9 dentibus tenebris pervenissent, pergunt inde Collatiam, ubi Lucretiam

haudquaquam

ut regias nurus,

quas in convivio luxuque cum aequalibus viderant tempus terentes, sed nocte sera deditam lanae inter lucubrantes ancillas in medio aedium sedentem inveniunt. 10 fuit.

Muliebris certaminis laus penes Lucretiam

Adveniens

vir

Tarquiniique excepti benigne

victor maritus comiter invitat regies iuvenes. 1

necopinato TvV necinopinato (nee inopinato P) necopinato JJeerwagen. :

1

(p.

A similar scene is imagined by Tibullus, 211 of the volume in this series).

198

I.

iii.

;

Ibi :

in

83

ff.

fl

BOOK

I.

LVII.

3-10

the place with intrenchments, and began to beleaguer Here in their permanent camp, as is the enemy. usual with a war not sharp but long drawn out, furlough was rather freely granted, more freely however to the leaders than to the soldiers the young princes for their part passed their idle hours together at It chanced, as they dinners and drinking bouts. were drinking in the quarters of Sextus Tarquinius, where Tarquinius Collatinus, son of Egerius, was also a guest, that the subject of wives came up. Every man fell to praising his own wife with enthusiasm, and, as their rivalry grew hot, Collatinus said that there was no need to talk about it, for it was in their power to know, in a few hours' time, how far the rest If the were excelled by his own Lucretia. " Come vigour of youth is in us let us mount our horses and see for ourselves the disposition of our wives. Let every man regard as the surest test what meets his eyes when the woman's husband enters unexpected." " " Agreed they all They were heated with wine. cried, and clapping spurs to their horses were off for Rome. Arriving there at early dusk, they thence proceeded to Collatia, where Lucretia was discovered very differently employed from the daughters-in-law of the king. These they had seen at a luxurious banquet, whiling away the time with their young but Lucretia, though it was late at night, friends was busily engaged upon her wool, while her maidens toiled about her in the lamplight as she sat in the hall of her house. 1 The prize of this contest in womanly virtues fell to Lucretia. As Collatinus and the Tarquinii approached, they were graciously received, and the victorious husband courteously invited the young princes to his table. It was there ;

!

!

;

199

B.C.

LIVY Sex. Tarquinium mala libido Lucretiae per vim stu-

cum forma turn spectata castitas prandae capit Et turn quidem ab nocturno iuvenali ludo ;

11

incitat.

in castra redeunt.

LVIII. Faucis interiectis diebus Sex. Tarquinius Collatino cum comite uno Collatiam venit

inscio 2

Ubi exceptus benigne ab ignaris consilii cum post in hospitale cubiculum deductus esset, amore

cenam

ardens, postquam satis tuta circa sopitique

videbantur, stricto gladio venit

manu

sinistraque

omnes

ad dormientem Lucretiam mulieris

pectore

oppresso

"Tace, Lucretia," inquit "Sex. Tarquinius sum; ferrum in manu est moriere, si emiseris vocem." ;

;

3

Cum

pavida ex somno mulier nullam opem, prope

mortem imminentem 4

videret, turn Tarquinius fateri miscere amorem, orare, precibus minas, versare in omnes partes muliebrem animum. Ubi obstinatam

videbat et ne mortis quidem metu inclinari, addit ad

metum dedecus cum mortua iugulatum servum nudum positurum ait, ut in sordido adulterio necata :

cum

obstinatam pudiprofectusque inde Tarquinius ferox expugnato decore muliebri esset, Lucretia maesta tanto malo nuntium Romam eundem

5 dicatur.

citiam

Quo

velut

terrore

vi

victrix

vicisset

l

libido,

ad patrem Ardeamque ad virum mittit, ut 1

2OO

velut vi victrix

M.

cum

Mueller: uelut uictrix n.

sin-

BOOK

I.

LVII.

IO-LVIH. 5

that SextusTarquinius was seized with a wicked desire not only her beauty, to debauch Lucretia by force ;

her proved chastity as well, provoked him. However, for the present they ended the boyish prank of the night and returned to the camp. LVIII. When a few days had gone by, Sextus Tarquinius, without letting Collatinus know, took a Being kindly single attendant and went to Collatia. welcomed, for no one suspected his purpose, he was but

brought after dinner to a guest-chamber. Burning with passion, he waited till it seemed to him that all about him was secure and everybody fast asleep then, drawing his sword, he came to the sleeping Lucretia. Holding the woman down with his left I hand on her breast, he said, " Be still, Lucretia am Sextus Tarquinius. My sword is in my hand. " In affright the woman Utter a sound, and you die No help was in sight, but started out of her sleep. ;

!

!

Then Tarquinius began to only imminent death. declare his love, to plead, to mingle threats with prayers, to bring every resource to bear upon her

When

he found her obdurate and fear of death, he went farther and threatened her with disgrace, saying that when she was dead he would kill his slave and lay him naked by her side, that she might be said to have been put to death in adultery with a man of base condition. At this dreadful prospect her resolute modesty was overcome, as if with force, by his victorious lust and Tarquinius departed, exulting in his

woman's

heart.

not to be

moved even by

;

conquest of a woman's honour. Lucretia, grieving at her great disaster, dispatched the same message to her father in Rome and to her husband at Ardea :

201

B.C. eq